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The Dictatorship

Why this 19-year-old trans woman says it’s clear that Trump wants people like her dead

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Why this 19-year-old trans woman says it’s clear that Trump wants people like her dead

Last week, President Donald Trump signed yet another executive order targeting the rights of transgender people in this country. This one bars federal funds from going to health care providers that provide gender-affirming care to trans people under age 19.

Because the order blocks 18-year-olds, legal U.S. adults, from accessing transition care, early speculation among some legal observers is that bumping up the age of restriction to 19 instead of limiting it to under-18s provides federal courts with a precedent that brings the administration closer to enacting a complete ban on all gender-affirming care, including for adults. Understandably, the executive order quickly spread further panic among trans people, who have faced action after action from the White House over the first two weeks of the new presidential term.

“It really feels like we took two steps forward and are now being dragged backwards. It’s kind of terrifying living day to day waiting to see what’s going to be stripped away next.”

Already as president, Trump has signed executive orders that have led to a ban on trans people serving in the U.S. militarya bathroom ban in federal government buildingsthe Equal Employment Opportunity Commission reserving the right to investigate any employers who allow trans employees to use bathrooms according to their gender identity, and the Education Department to investigate funding for any schools that accommodate trans students. The White House also ordered government staff to remove pronouns from their email signatures, and the State Department removed “TQI” from the standard LGBTQI or LGBTQI+ abbreviation on a number of resource pages, addressing only LGB users.

“It’s really … demoralizing,” Lyra, a 19-year-old trans woman from New York, told me. “I started estrogen when I was 18, and it was a large reason as to why I could continue my studies in college.”

Trump’s actions appear to be a blatant attempt to wholesale wipe out a highly marginalized minority by fiat. There will, of course, be legal challenges ahead, but with a firmly conservative Supreme Court in place for the foreseeable future, any court wins will likely be temporary at best.

For Lyra, who only just recently passed the 19-year-old threshold laid out in the medical order, the expansion into restrictions on young adult care for 18-year-olds is particularly concerning. “It shows that this isn’t just about ‘kids’ as they say, because so many are already waiting for that 18 [year old] barrier for informed consent,” she said. “They’re pushing the line here, and mixed with all the other EOs relating to trans people, it really feels like we took two steps forward and are now being dragged backwards. It’s kind of terrifying living day to day waiting to see what’s going to be stripped away next.”

Along with threatening funding cuts to facilities providing youth gender-affirming care, Trump’s order seeks to politically overturn the medical consensus undergirding the current protocol for providing gender-affirming care. It orders the Department of Health and Human Services to disregard the current World Professional Association for Transgender Health guidelineswhich have been formed over decades by the leading medical experts in transgender health care, and states the Trump administration will conduct its own review of the science behind gender-affirming care.

It’s a move similar to that of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2022, when he appointed a political lackey to run the Florida Department of Health and produce a sham “review” of the evidence behind gender-affirming care, which a team of experts reviewed and stated was “thoroughly flawed and lacking scientific weight.”

We’ve seen politicians work to politically banish health care they disapprove of before. They did it with abortion care, they’re doing it now with birth controland they’re well on their way to overriding the many doctors, experts and caretakers who know best what trans kids need.

This is lifesaving, medically necessary care according to mainstream legitimate medical authority in the United States, including the American Academy of Pediatricsthe American Medical Associationthe American Psychological Associationthe Endocrine Societythe World Professional Association for Transgender Healththe American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologistsand many others.

Accessing gender-affirming care already saved Lyra’s life once.

Lyra’s parents disowned her when she started estrogen at age 18, she tells me, and she says without the care she currently receives, she fears she would be dead by now. Her care “was a large part of why I was able to claim financial independence,” she said. “Otherwise, I’d likely have been in a much worse state today even if I was still with [my parents]being made to watch my body mature another year. I’d likely have turned to do-it-yourself” — meaning ordering her own hormones from a black market website and guessing at her dosage — “instead. Access to testing and medical offices really helped, making sure I was safe and that my dosages were correct.”

The conservatives in power want us to disappear. They want to purge us from society. Existing is the best revenge.

Without elaborating further, Lyra said she has contingency plans for accessing her hormones should a full adult ban come down from the White House. It’s a calculation that hundreds of thousands of trans people are having to make right now.

I want to finish this piece by directly addressing the trans people reading this. I know these are dark, hard times. We have so little information right now, and we don’t know what else is coming down the pike. But our community has been here before. There might not have been a total ban on our care, but there was a time not long ago when only the wealthiest among us could access legitimate health care.

We persisted then and we can persist now. Look after your trans friends, check in on them. Reach out to others if you need help. Find a reason to keep going.

“A lot of the reason I made it through my youth was in spite of my family, and I think some part of that continues on here,” Lyra said. “I’m motivated to keep going in spite of the bans and hate.”

The conservatives in power want us to disappear. They want to purge us from society. Existing is the best revenge.

If you consider the potential impacts of blocking people from receiving vital, lifesaving care, the message feels painfully clear: “[Trump] wants us dead,” Lyra said — “so I’m not doing it.” We have to live, if only to prove to those who are trying to erase us today that they are wrong.

Katelyn Burns

Katelyn Burns is a freelance journalist based in New England. She was the first openly transgender Capitol Hill reporter in U.S. history.

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The Dictatorship

Trump threatens to fire Powell if the Fed Chair remains with central bank after his term ends

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Trump threatens to fire Powell if the Fed Chair remains with central bank after his term ends

WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal prosecutors made an unannounced visit this week to a construction site at Federal Reserve headquarters that is the focus of an investigation into a $2.5 billion renovation projectaccording to two people familiar with the visit.

Two prosecutors and an investigator from U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro’s office were turned away on Tuesday by a building contractor and referred to Fed attorneys, one of the people said. The two people familiar with the visit spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to publicly discuss an ongoing investigation.

The visit underscores that the Trump administration is not backing down from its investigation of the Fed and its chair, Jerome Powell, even though the probe has delayed the confirmation of a new chair nominated by President Donald Trump. The investigation is focused on cost overruns and brief testimony about the project last summer by Powell. Trump confirmed in an interview that aired Wednesday on Fox Business that he wants to continue the probe.

Last month, during a closed-door hearing before a federal judge, a top deputy from Pirro’s office conceded that they hadn’t found any evidence of a crime in their investigation of the headquarters project.

Robert Hur, an attorney for the Federal Reserve board of governors, sent an email to Pirro’s prosecutors about their visit and their request for a “tour” to “check on progress” at the construction site. Hur’s email, which The Associated Press has viewed, noted that U.S. District Judge James Boasberg concluded that their interest in the Federal Reserve’s renovation project was “pretextual.”

AP AUDIO: Prosecutors sought access to Federal Reserve building as Trump threatens to fire Powell

AP Washington correspondent Sagar Meghani reports on more drama surrounding a federal probe of a massive construction project at the Federal Reserve’s headquarters.

“Should you wish to challenge that finding, the courts provide an avenue for you; it is not appropriate for you to try to circumvent it,” Hur wrote.

Republican Tillis is key vote

Sen. Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican who is a key member of the Senate Banking Committee, has vowed to vote against Kevin WarshTrump’s nominee to replace Powell as Fed chair, until the investigation is dropped. With the committee closely divided on partisan lines, Tillis’ opposition is enough to block Warsh from receiving the committee’s approval.

Tillis on Wednesday criticized the investigation as “bogus, ill-timed, ill-informed” and repeated that seven Republican members of the banking panel have said they do not believe Powell committed a crime when he testified last June.

Tillis also said there aren’t enough votes on the committee or in the broader Senate to do an end-run around the committee and get Warsh confirmed some other way.

“There really is no path,” he told reporters, adding that Pirro and her aides were “asleep at the switch” because the investigation has essentially delayed Powell’s departure from the Fed, despite Trump’s obsessive criticism of the Fed chair. Powell has now said he won’t leave until the investigation is resolved.

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Tillis suggested Pirro blindsided the White House with her investigation. “They should have consulted with the White House, because I’m sure if they would have, (the White House) would have said, ‘no, we can wait,’” until Powell steps down.

But Kevin Hassett, the Trump administration’s top economist, said Wednesday that the Justice Department got involved because “the president wanted to investigate the cost overrun,” Axios reported.

The Banking panel said Tuesday that it will hold a hearing on Warsh’s nomination April 21. Powell’s term as Fed chair ends May 15, but Powell said last month he would remain as chair until a replacement is named.

Powell is serving a separate term as a member of the Fed’s governing board that lasts until January 2028. Chairs typically leave the board when their terms as chair end, but they can remain on the board if they choose. Powell has said he won’t leave until the investigation is resolved. If he remains it would deny Trump the opportunity to appoint someone else to the seven-member board.

Late Tuesday Tillis posted a link on social media to The Wall Street Journal’s article on the visit below an image of the Three Stooges and wrote, “The U.S. Attorney’s Office for D.C. at the crime scene.”

Investigation centers on building renovations

The investigation centers on an appearance by Powell before the Banking Committee last June, when he was asked about cost overruns on the renovations. The most recent estimates from the Fed suggest the current estimated cost of $2.5 billion is about $600 million higher than a 2022 estimate of $1.9 billion.

“It is probably corrupt, but what it really is, is incompetent,” Trump said. “Don’t you think we have to find out what happened there?”

The president’s support for the investigation threatens a timeframe set out by Sen. Tim Scott, a South Carolina Republican who chairs the Banking Committee. Scott said Tuesday on Fox Business that he believed the investigation would be “wrapped up in the next few weeks,” allowing Warsh to be confirmed soon after.

Threat to fire Powell

News of the unannounced visit by prosecutors comes as Trump has again threatened to fire Powell, if the Federal Reserve Chair decides to stay on the central bank’s governing board after his term as chair expires next month.

“Well then I’ll have to fire him, OK?” Trump said.

Trump has for months wanted to remove Powell, saying he has been too slow in orchestrating interest rate cuts that would give the U.S. economy a quick boost. Powell has said the investigation is a pretext to undermine the Fed’s independence to set rates.

Sen. Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican, said Trump can only fire Powell “for cause,” meaning some kind of misconduct, “so that’s a pretty tall order.”

Supreme Court weighing another Trump removal

Trump’s threat to fire Powell comes as the Supreme Court is weighing the president’s effort to remove another central bank governor, Lisa Cook. Lower courts have so far allowed Cook to remain in her job while her legal challenge to the firing continues. The Supreme Court also seemed likely to keep her on the Fed when the court heard arguments in January. A decision could come any time.

The issue in Cook’s case is whether allegations of mortgage fraud, which she has denied, is a sufficient reason to fire her or a mere pretext masking Trump’s desire to exert more control over U.S. interest rate policy.

The Supreme Court has allowed the firings of the heads of other governmental agencies at the president’s discretion, with no claim that they did anything wrong, while also signaling that it is approaching the independence of the nation’s central bank more cautiouslycalling the Fed “a uniquely structured, quasi-private entity.”

___

AP Writers Seung Min Kim, Mark Sherman, Paul Wiseman, Alanna Durkin Richer, and video journalist Nathan Ellgren contributed to this report.

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The Dictatorship

The Latest: US blockade of Iranian ports ‘fully implemented’ as Trump says war is near end

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The Latest: US blockade of Iranian ports ‘fully implemented’ as Trump says war is near end

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The Dictatorship

It’s Tulsi Gabbard’s turn to target Trump’s enemies

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President Donald Trump was impeached in December 2019, charged by the House of Representatives with abusing his office to gain leverage over Joe Biden in the upcoming presidential election. This week, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard rebooted that scandal with the release of a handful of newly declassified documents that question the beginning of the impeachment investigation — in hopes of discrediting everything that followed.

MS NOW confirmed Wednesday that Gabbard’s office has sent criminal referrals to the Justice Department for the whistleblower whose concern over a phone call between Trump and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy launched the impeachment inquiry and the former inspector general who fielded their complaint. The referrals were first reported by Fox News.

Gabbard’s new disclosures mirror a well-worn playbook used by Trump’s loyalists to investigate his investigators. But in every instance, including this latest endeavor, the evidence gathered of wrongdoing on Trump’s part has far outweighed proof of misconduct from his investigators.

In every instance, the evidence gathered of wrongdoing on Trump’s part has far outweighed proof of misconduct from his investigators.

In Gabbard’s telling, as she posted on Xthe process was an inherently corrupt conspiracy where “deep state actors within the Intelligence Community concocted a false narrative that Congress used to usurp the will of the American people.” Michael Atkinson, former inspector general for the Intelligence Community, is painted in a press release accompanying the new materials as a rogue actor who spun a secondhand tale into an attempted coup.

Newly-declassified records expose how deep state actors within the Intelligence Community concocted a false narrative that Congress used to usurp the will of the American people and impeach duly-elected President @realDonaldTrump in 2019.

Today, we reveal the truth 👇… pic.twitter.com/oLXW5nqi2n

— DNI Tulsi Gabbard (@DNIGabbard) April 13, 2026

The materials posted Monday do provide an interesting window into the chain of events eventually leading to Trump’s first impeachment. Among them are official records from the preliminary 14-day investigation Atkinson undertook to determine that the whistleblower’s initial complaint was of “urgent concern” and needed to be reported to Congress. Also included are transcripts from Atkinson’s two closed-door interviews with the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, one before the White House released the transcript of the Zelenskyy call and one after the impeachment inquiry was underway.

But despite Gabbard’s breathless claims of a “coordinated effort … to manufacture a conspiracy,” nothing among the materials contradicts anything uncovered later. If anything, the initial interviews with the whistleblower, conducted in late August 2019, line up neatly with the fuller story that would be revealed over the coming weeks in the press and during the House’s impeachment inquiry. Both the whistleblower and a corroborating witness were extremely forthcoming about exactly what they did and did not know about the call, and why they were deeply concerned by Trump’s repeating conspiracy theories and pressing Zelenskyy to resume an investigation into Biden.

Gabbard’s cries of “politicization” from Atkinson are likewise overblown. Her claim is based on a section in the IG’s interview process where subjects were asked if they have anything in their background that might reveal any biases that could be used against them. The responses given suggest a certain hesitation to speak out for fear their words would be spun into right-wing attacks but was overridden by the necessity to speak out. Atkinson transparently mentioned in a letter to then-acting DNI Joseph Maguire that there was an “indicia of an arguable political bias” from the complainant, but that it didn’t alter his determination that their information was credible.

Maguire initially prevented Atkinson from providing the complaint to Congress, claiming that the Justice Department ruled it was outside of the IG’s remit. Atkinson disagreed and told lawmakers an “urgent concern” existed, as he believed the law required him, but did not provide the whistleblower’s complaint. Instead, it was only after media reports of the investigation and the White House’s subsequent release of the so-called perfect call with Zelenskyy that Atkinson was able to speak to Congress about the complaint directly.

All of this, in Gabbard’s telling, amounted to a “weaponization” of the process.

Several things stand out at this point. First is how ill-equipped Gabbard is to be leading America’s intelligence community. Her emphasis on how the first people to come forward about Trump’s scheme didn’t have firsthand knowledge of the call would be laughable if it weren’t so inept. It is literally the job of the intelligence community to consume partial information as it is received and work that raw data into a complete analysis. What Gabbard is essentially saying is that someone who only saw a single piece of the puzzle, at first, cannot be trusted to put together a picture in their head once more pieces have come together.

It is literally the job of the intelligence community to consume partial information as it is received and work that raw data into a complete analysis.

Second is how blatantly she has copied the failed formula of the GOP’s efforts to discredit the Russia investigation during Trump’s first term. For years now, through numerous investigations from the House and an independent counsel alike, Republicans have tried to claim wrongdoing from the FBI and other supposed “deep state” figures when first investigating hints of Russian interference in the 2016 election. But John Durham’s four-year-long probe came up empty, and despite Trump’s demands for revenge, there have been no criminal charges filed against anyone involved in the case.

Finally, it’s worth remembering Gabbard’s position when she was serving as a U.S. representative from Hawaii during Trump’s first impeachment. By the time the House voted on the articles of impeachment, she was already running a longshot bid for president. Accordingly, she was attempting to position herself as not beholden to the left wing, but still a viable candidate to be the Democratic nominee.

Gabbard was the only Democrat in the House to vote “present” on the articles. But she made clear in a statement afterward that she believed “President Trump is guilty of wrongdoing.” Her vote, or nonvote rather, was cast because, in her view, “removal of a sitting President must not be the culmination of a partisan process, fueled by tribal animosities that have so gravely divided our country.” The centrism by way of cowardice branding that brought her to prominence has fully given way — she now simply yields to the rightward pressures she finds herself under as part of Trump’s cabinet.

In his first interview with the House Permanent Select Committee on IntelligenceAtkinson described himself as a first responder, one who may not have had the full picture, but who had heard a fire alarm ringing and chose to act. “I don’t know whether it is just smoke, don’t know whether it is a small fire,” he told lawmakers as he refused to reveal what he’d learned from his preliminary findings. “All I know is that there was a time when … another first responder was not getting information about an alleged fire.”

Atkinson did what he thought was right and in accordance with the law by telling Congress that a complaint existed. The whistleblower did the same, despite the potential reprisals they’d face from a vengeful White House. Gabbard is now targeting them specifically for doing so, even as it is her job to be the early warning system against the nation’s greatest threats. It’s disturbing then to think what alarm bells she would prefer to silence, what risks she would take with America’s safety, rather than risk upsetting Trump.

Hayes Brown is a writer and editor for MS NOW. He focuses on politics and policymaking at the federal level, including Congress and the White House.

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