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The Dictatorship

Trump’s retribution rampage finds a target in his own hometown

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Trump’s retribution rampage finds a target in his own hometown

President Donald Trump’s hometown of New York City is ground zero for his assault on blue cities and states and their institutions.

The rule of law is being replaced with the whims of the president, and so far there’s no sign that any of the Democrats running to be mayor, including damaged incumbent Eric Adams, are up to the moment of protecting the city from Trump when needed.

Adams is openly compromised. The other candidates have been more interested in talking about that or taking whacks at the front-runner, former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, than in articulating how they’d stand up to this presidential pressure campaign hitting the city from all sides.

The rule of law is being replaced with the whims of the president.

There’s the $400 million in federal funding being withheld from Columbia University in a legally dubious move, at least until it complies with a sweeping and nebulous series of demands. These include a crackdown on anti-Israel protests and a masking ban at the same time that masked federal agents are picking up campus members and shipping them to Louisiana for deportation proceedings.

Then there’s the executive order, a true bill of attainderthat threatened to destroy Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, one of the city’s most prominent law firms, for employing and working on behalf of the president’s real and perceived enemies. Trump said Thursday he’ll drop the order after the firm’s head went to the White House, which said he apologized for “wrongdoing” and agreed to provide $40 million in legal services to Trump-favored causes over his term. (Trump should update the title of his best-known book to “The Art of the Shakedown.”)

Trump also imposed the legally dubious demand to shut down New York’s already federally approved and implemented congestion pricing plan, along with blackmail about cutting other federal funding unless Gov. Kathy Hochul complies and cuts out what Trump’s transportation secretary whined Thursday is “open disrespect of the federal government” in refusing to accept its made-up ultimatum.

Trump’s Justice Department is also suing the state for refusing to let the feds use its DMV database, including undocumented immigrants with state driver’s licenses, as a de facto deportation list.

And then there are the threats from Trump’s “border czar,” Tom Homan, about how “I don’t care what the judges think, I don’t care what the left thinks, we’re coming” and Homan’s open extortion of Mayor Adams — who is desperate to get a dispensation in the criminal corruption case against him — about how “I’ll be in his office, up his butt, saying where the hell is the agreement we came to” if the mayor doesn’t deliver much more cooperation with federal immigration enforcement, never mind New York’s sanctuary city laws.

As the hits keep coming with more on the way, Adams has said he won’t publicly criticize Trump or his administration, openly humiliating himself and the city he’s supposed to lead in the process.

New York City didn’t go red in 2024 by any measure, but it got notably less blue as Trump basically matched his 2020 numbers while Kamala Harris fell short of Joe Biden’s 2020 results in every single electoral district.

A message to those Democrat skeptics: You can dislike any or all campus protesters, menacing street theater, white-collar law firms, congestion pricing, blue state governors, the far left or crooked mayors and still recognize that using the power of the federal government to target real or supposed “enemies” this way is deeply disturbing.

Trump should update the title of his best-known book to ‘The Art of the Shakedown.’

And that’s before getting to the wild terror claims being thrown around by the feds without even nominal attribution and the supposed gang members being shipped, without any evidence or hearing in a frontal assault on the judiciary and the rule of law itself, to a hellhole El Salvadoran prison.

If you thought the Biden administration was committing “lawfare” and are applauding Trump’s retribution tour, your complaint was not about having an “enemies list” — just with who was on it.

Trump’s extortion scheme, demanding tribute from cities and elite institutions as if they were conquered territories, is about exacting punishment, of course, but it’s largely about compliance.

Lop off a few heads and other people get nervous about lifting theirs up. That goes for protesters and administrators and mayors and just about everyone else. The beatings will continue until morale improves.

Trump’s big idea, if “idea” isn’t too generous a word, is to take hard, wild swings and expect everyone who doesn’t get hit to race to comply before the hammer comes down again — and to get in an as many swings as he can before courts or lawmakers or anyone else can even react.

That’s why Manhattan medical giant NYU Langone is scrubbing references to its “diverse students” and the word “marginalized” from its website and policy documents and reconsidering words as harmless as “vulnerable” for fear of incurring Trump’s ire.

You don’t need to love all things DEI to recognize that executive orders criminalizing an “ideology” without even defining it are meant to coerce silence and violate what had been the bedrock American principle that the government doesn’t get to pick speech winners and losers.

That crude approach appears to be working. It’s not just NYU Langone, which was unlucky enough to have its memo leak first. Nearly every lawyer is advising the institutions they work for to tone down their language, trim their sails and hope the lightning strikes someone else.

Columbia’s board is reportedly trying to figure out how to meet Trump’s terms, including placing its Middle Eastern studies department in “academic receivership” despite the damage that would do to the institution’s independence — and despite the fact that Trump hasn’t even said he’ll restore the money if it complies, only that he won’t negotiate at all until it does.

New York has talked a big game about progressive values, but those are being tested as never before.

Only a handful of other schools have called out the shakedown, reversing the famous Benjamin Franklin quip at the signing of the Declaration of Independence about how “We must, indeed, all hang together or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately.” Most everyone is keeping quiet, hoping someone else gets hung first.

New York has talked a big game about progressive values, but those are being tested as never before. The rest of the country is watching to see how America’s biggest city, and Trump’s hometown, will handle the tough years ahead as voters decide whether to put up or shut up.

If there’s a mayoral candidate willing to actually lead before voters give them the job by talking about the tough times and hard choices that are coming as the federal government cuts funding to New York City and pressures whoever’s mayor to comply with his diktats, this is the time to find out if New Yorkers are serious or not about wanting a profile in courage.

Harry seal

Harry Siegel is a senior editor at the newsroom The Citya columnist for the New York Daily Newsand the producer and a co-host of the “FAQ NYC” podcast.

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The Dictatorship

This new Malia Obama-directed Nike ad featuring A’ja Wilson is a love letter to Black girls

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This new Malia Obama-directed Nike ad featuring A’ja Wilson is a love letter to Black girls

Black girls’ musical play — embodied percussion passed down through generations — is rarely seen as sport. But it is. The 1980 Fantastic Four Double Dutch Champswho joined the first international rap tour in ’82, are proof. But because these games are songs — and center girls — they’re rarely taken seriously. A new Nike ad campaign starring A’ja Wilson and directed by Malia Obama makes us take them seriously. In her pink A’One signature shoe, Wilson and Black girls take center court.

Because these games are songs — and center girls — they’re rarely taken seriously.

One of the two commercials shows Wilson, a two-time WNBA champion and three-time league MVP with the Las Vegas Aces, sitting on the steps of a front porch with a girl of about 10 who’s teaching a handclapping game-song to the tune of “Miss Mary Mack” — correcting the 28-year-old athletic genius when she messes up:

A’ja Wilson’s on top, top, top / Can’t take her spot, spot, spot / She’s a real one through, through, through / Always does what she’ll do, do, do.

Another ad, featuring the same rhymed chants, is a montage of HBCU cheer formations, sashays, stomps and hair politics, too. It opens with jump cuts of beads and braids that spell out A’ja’s name as two young Black girls clap and sing. It’s a cinematic mashup that nods to Beyoncé’s “Formation” music video. It’s intercut with scenes from “Black Girls Play: A Story of Hand Games,” the Oscar-shortlisted doc selected for the 2025 American Film Showcase. The NAACP Image Award-winning film was produced by Marsha Cooke, vice president of ESPN Films and “30 for 30,” and directed by the innovative, Oscar-winning Rada Studio team out of Brooklyn. I’m a global envoy for that documentary as an esteemed scholar of Black girlhood studies.

Under Obama’s direction, Black feminist layering is everywhere: sound and visual interplay ping-ponging between body percussion and cinematic bombast. The sound of a basketball hitting hardwood is sampled and pitched down under “through, through, through” — pulling us deeper into A’ja’s signature flow: hooping, passing, jooking and dunking. All this fun and “fan”-fare rides the familiar melody of “Mary Mack.”

The ads, rich with deliberate joy and reverence for Black girls’ play, center a Black woman who knows what it means to be excluded — and what it takes for a Black girl to rise above it.

In her 2024 book, “Dear Black Girls,” Wilson recounts being in fourth grade at a predominantly white school in the Confederate flag-waving town of Hopkins, South Carolina, thrilled about attending a bestie’s birthday celebration. “You know it’s a slumber party, right?!? You might have to sleep outside,” the friend said. “My dad doesn’t really like Black people.”

The ads, rich with deliberate joy and reverence for Black girls’ play, center a Black woman who knows what it means to be excluded.

Wilson wrote, “It felt like I aged 10 years in one moment.”

The first time Black girls are made to see they’re “different” often marks the beginning of a lifelong denial of loving their bodies. Maya Angelou, in “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” wrote, “If growing up is painful for the Southern Black girl, being aware of her displacement is the rust on the razor that threatens the throat. It is an unnecessary insult.”

But Wilson’s mom helped fourth-grade A’ja avoid letting other people reduce her to her skin color or size.

She won M-V-P, P, P / 1, 2 and 3, 3, 3 / Her game is tea, tea, tea / She made history, -ry, -ry.

In my book “The Games Black Girls Play: Learning the Ropes from Double Dutch to Hip-Hop,” I show how girls’ oral communication and embodied lessons in musical blackness operate like algorithms. Those patterns seed creative fluency, which is also necessary in elite play.

Obama’s ads brilliantly use Contract – putting new words to an old tune, in this case “Miss Mary Mack.” This compositional method primes listeners to sing the rhyme about A’ja Wilson like a victory lap, celebrating her top-tier basketball prowess. We say her name, see her image and name-check the likeness in the campaign while imagining ourselves in her shoes.

In the book that’s her personal love letter to Black girls, Wilson writes, “No matter how well you think you know the game, there will always be those little moments when you’re reminded about the way people see Black women in our society. And I can’t lie to you. It will take your breath away every time.”

They said she wasn’t enough, ’nuff, ’nuff / So she did it for us, us, us / And if you talk smack, smack, smack/ She’s gonna clap back, back, back.

No matter how well you think you know the game, there will always be those little moments when you’re reminded about the way people see Black women in our society.

a’ja wilson

Wilson is a two-time Olympic gold medalist and the first WNBA player to score 1,000 points in a season. Her six-year Nike extension deal, including her A’One signature shoe, is among the most lucrative in women’s basketball.

Wilson’s biography reminds us that excellence won’t shield Black girls from the pain of being excluded. Her story and Obama’s narrative direction reveal how much the world still needs to make room for Black girls’ joy and brilliance, and power.

College athletes couldn’t profit from their names, images and likenesses when Wilson starred for the South Carolina Gamecocks. As the WNBA’s No. 1 pick in 2018, Wilson earned a rookie salary of around $52,000 — less than I earned that year as a professor with a Ph.D. And don’t forget that Black Women’s Equal Pay Day falls on July 27 — marking how far into the year Black women in all occupations must work to earn what white men earned the year before. Last year, the rookie salary for the NBA’s No. 1 pick was $12.6 million. Little things like a shoe can open doors for other girls and women.

Don’t let anyone tell you that you can’t make a life or a career out of something once thought small and insignificant, like a girls’ handclapping game song. Play is a fundamental human activity and a right for children — and adults.

Malia envisioned it. A’ja lives it.

Kyra D. Gaunt

Kyra D. Gaunt(Ph.D. 1997 University of Michigan, M.M. SUNY BInghamton, 1988), an esteemed ethnomusicologist, continues to make waves in arts and culture with her 2007 Merriam prize-winning book, “The Games Black Girls Play: Learning the Ropes from Double-Dutch to Hip-Hop.” In 2015, it was a catalyst for choreographer Camille A. Brown and Dancers’ Bessie Award-nominated performance, “BLACK GIRL: Linguistic Play.” In 2020, The New York Times Parenting Section commissioned “The Magic of Black Girls Play,” which was selected as Editor’s Pick of the Day. She is featured in the ESPN-produced documentary short, “Black Girls Play,” directed by Rada Studio, which won at the Tribeca Film Festival. 

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The Dictatorship

State Department reportedly pressures nations hit by tariffs to adopt Elon Musk’s Starlink service

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State Department reportedly pressures nations hit by tariffs to adopt Elon Musk’s Starlink service

Under Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s leadership, the State Department appears to have become a tool to serve Elon Musk’s business interests.

Rubio has overseen the dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development and the closure of an office that’s been crucial to the fight against foreign disinformationwhich is to say: He has taken a sledgehammer to some of the department’s crucial missions worldwide.

Meanwhile, a new report from The Washington Post suggests his State Department has launched a new project of sorts: getting foreign nations — particularly, nations who may want to curry favor with the U.S. amid Trump’s destructive tariff war — to adopt Musk’s Starlink internet service.

The Post obtained an internal State Department memo suggesting that the country of Lesotho, which Trump mocked at this year’s joint address to Congress by saying no one has ever heard of it, was hoping that its recent Starlink deal would lead to tariff relief.

The Post quotes the memo as saying:

As the government of Lesotho negotiates a trade deal with the United States, it hopes that licensing Starlink demonstrates goodwill and intent to welcome U.S. businesses.

The report says Lesotho is one of several countries that have granted Starlink access while trying to navigate Trump’s tariffs. And it details how the administration has pushed for nations to reach such deals amid the tariff talks, though they haven’t demanded it. According to the Post:

A series of internal government messages obtained by The Post reveal how U.S. embassies and the State Department have pushed nations to clear hurdles for U.S. satellite companies, often mentioning Starlink by name. The documents do not show that the Trump team has explicitly demanded favors for Starlink in exchange for lower tariffs. But they do indicate that Secretary of State Marco Rubio has increasingly instructed officials to push for regulatory approvals for Musk’s satellite firm at a moment when the White House is calling for wide-ranging talks on trade.

It’s easy to see how other nations might conclude that reaching agreements to do business with a company run by Musk, the president’s top campaign donor in 2024, might earn them some tariff relief. And for the record, the State Department didn’t even deny that it’s hawking Musk’s service, telling the Post:

Starlink is an American-made product that has been game-changing in helping remote areas around the world gain internet connectivity. Any patriotic American should want to see an American company’s success on the global stage, especially over compromised Chinese competitors.

No acknowledgment there of the obvious conflict of interest in this case.

It would be one thing if Starlink were simply the best internet service available, but I’ve written about the federal government’s previous determinations about Starlink’s shortcomingsso the fact that the State Department seems to have a specific interest in promoting the service to foreign nations feels like a favor to Musk over all else.

Keep in mind: This is all being carried out by the same conservative movement that accused Hunter Biden of unethically using his father’s name to prop up his art business. The same Republican Party that portrayed itself as a defender of free market capitalism as it complained about the Obama administration picking winners and losers in certain industries.

This movement is now led by someone who turned the White House lawn into a showroom to promote Musk’s Tesla company, whose administration is quickly implementing Starlink across federal agenciesand whose State Department is urging foreign countries to adopt the service, as well.

Republicans seem to know how unethical this all is, even if they won’t admit it. Last month, I wrote about Republicans changing House rules to prevent Democrats from forcing votes on whether to investigate various Trump administration scandals — including Musk’s conflicts of interests.

It looks like Republicans would rather turn a blind eye to this obvious issue.

Ja’han Jones

Ja’han Jones is an BLN opinion blogger. He previously wrote The ReidOut Blog. He is a futurist and multimedia producer focused on culture and politics. His previous projects include “Black Hair Defined” and the “Black Obituary Project.”

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The Dictatorship

Trump’s ominous World Cup comments are the opposite of ‘sportswashing’

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Trump’s ominous World Cup comments are the opposite of ‘sportswashing’

President Donald Trump’s recent insistence that protesters during the FIFA World Cup need to be “reasonable” or risk getting into trouble with the law is yet another demonstration of Trump acting as if he presides over a kingdom instead of a democracy. And it’s certainly not going to help reverse the plunge in tourism tied to his treatment of immigrants.

At a meeting of the World Cup task force at the White House on Tuesday, a reporter asked Trump, “Should people who have taken part in, for example, pro-Palestinian protests across the world, be concerned about being able to join the World Cup and watch it here in the U.S.?”

In the U.S., the government is not endowed with the authority to declare protests ‘reasonable’ or not.

While the reporter seemed to be asking whether visitors might be vetted based on their political views, Trump appeared to respond with a comment about allowing protests at the global soccer tournament, which will take place in summer 2026 in the U.S., Canada and Mexico.

“Well, I don’t know what you mean by that. … I think people are allowed to protest,” Trump said. “You have to do it in a reasonable manner. Not necessarily friendly, but reasonable. Otherwise [Attorney General] Pam [Bondi] will come after you and you’re gonna have a big problem.”

First, in the U.S., the government is not endowed with the authority to declare protests “reasonable” or not. Free speech in the U.S. is not absolute — you can get in trouble, for example, for threatening someone’s life or calling for imminent violence. But a “reasonable” speech criterion would be incompatible with democratic speech since “reasonable” is highly subjective and would serve as a dangerously capacious pretext for restricting speech. It’s a critical democratic norm that people are rightly entitled to hold “unreasonable” views and express themselves in ways that some might consider “unreasonable.”

The prospect of Trump as an arbiter of “reasonable” speech is particularly disturbing. While Trump has dubiously tried to claim the mantle of free speech defenderhis second term has been defined by an extraordinary crackdown on speech, including expelling immigrants for First Amendment-protected speech and trying to muzzle universities and regulate their research. The Trump administration has exploited obscure immigration law and civil rights law as a means of censoring pro-Palestinian speech.

It would be a fool’s errand for Americans (or non-Americans) inclined to protest during the World Cup — or any other time — to anticipate what Trump considers “reasonable,” since he clearly considers the content of speech he opposes to be unreasonable.

The World Cup, whose final match is by far the most widely watched sporting event in the worldis a natural site for protests. Players will often use gestures and attire to express solidarity with marginalized communities, alignment with social movements or criticism of governments. The tournament itself can also become a natural stage for protests to express grievances about the host country — like the anti-World Cup protests in Brazil during the run-up to the tournament and during the tournament itself that were in part about grievances tied to poor social services.

It’s reasonable to ask: Will Trump use the pretext of security to try to quash dissent, pre-emptively or in real time, based on whether he deems it “reasonable”? Would he try to pressure FIFA to similarly regulate players’ and teams’ expression?

When I attended the World Cup in Russia in 2018, local Russians told me they believed the authorities were unusually accommodating of the often disorderly atmosphere on the streets, which they attributed to the Russian government’s desire to project a more friendly image of the country than is typically accorded to it around the world.

It’s a form of “sportswashing” — when governments try to divert attention from their misdeeds through hosting lavish sporting events. These tournaments, which draw millions of visitors, are pivotal opportunities for host countries to project “soft power” and make an impression on tourists and journalists that might disrupt previous narratives about a country.

Trump appears to be positioning the U.S. in just the opposite fashion. In anticipation of the tournament, Trump is floating vague, undemocratic criteria for what speech he will “allow.”

To be sure, the vast majority of people who are looking to attend the World Cup — whether American or foreign — aren’t going to be interested in protests. But this kind of language isn’t going to encourage tourism, particularly as reports circulate of tourists being detained and treated harshly while trying to enter the U.S. and foreign governments issuing travel advisories regarding travel to the U.S., including advice to delete social media on phones. And it still introduces a variable that could, if the atmosphere turns repressive, conceivably accelerate the global perception that the U.S. is sliding toward authoritarianism. That growing perception wouldn’t be good for the United States’ global credibility or its economy. But it would be accurate.

Zeeshan aleem

Zeeshan Aleem is a writer and editor for BLN Daily. Previously, he worked at Vox, HuffPost and Blue Light News, and he has also been published in, among other places, The New York Times, The Atlantic, The Nation, and The Intercept. You can sign up for his free politics newsletter here.

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