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The Dictatorship

Most Trump voters still say they have no regrets. Here’s why that matters.

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Most Trump voters still say they have no regrets. Here’s why that matters.

A noticeable contingent of Kamala Harris voters has spent this year demanding that people who didn’t vote for her — whether for Donald Trump or another candidate — admit to a mistake that’s not only hurting the country but is hurting (or will hurt) them, too. Social media feeds are filled with people citing the latest Trump outrage and mockingly asking Trump voters, “Did you vote for this?!”

In the main, the Trump voter with buyer’s remorse is a mythical character not unlike, say, the moderate Republican.

There’s been a new category of schadenfreude-inducing stories focused on Trump voters who’ve lost their federal jobhad a loved one snatched by ICE or significantly suffered during the first few months of the administration. On top of that, some recent polls have found that Trump’s approval rating is below 40%. However, in the main, the Trump voter with buyer’s remorse is a mythical character not unlike, say, the moderate Republican.

The Public Religion Research Institute conducted a poll of more than 5,000 adults across 50 states between Feb. 28 and March 20 and found that 92% of Trump voters are satisfied with their vote. More than that, the PRRI poll finds that just about everybody who voted in November is satisfied with their decision, including 95% of Harris voters and 85% of people who voted third party. (PRRI reports a 1.69-point margin of error for its national survey.)

It seems obvious why Harris voters are the least regretful; her losing the election erased the potential for her to make any disappointing presidential decisions.

It is remarkable, though, that after Trump has fired thousands of blameless federal employeesantagonized alliesrattled the stock marketshrunk the economyeliminated a number of lifesaving humanitarian aid programsdefied the courts and put Fox News know-nothings in positions of power a near-identical share of his supporters suggest that they’d happily vote for him all over again.

But PRRI’s poll is consistent with a poll released April 14 by the University of Massachusetts Amherst that found that only 2% of Trump voters polled answered yes to “I regret my vote and would vote differently if I could.” And both those polls are consistent with a survey The New York Times conducted among a focus group last month that found that none of the 13 independent voters who voted for Trump in November regrets not voting for Harris.

Not the person who feels “bad” about the way things have been going. Or the one who’s “frustrated,” or the ones who feel “pessimistic,” “worried,” “hopeless” or even “lied to.”

“There’s a lot of social media saying: Hey, are you Republicans or MAGA people regretting your vote?” a “hopeful” 55-year-old Latino restaurant manager said. “And no, I’m not. As far as I’m concerned, he’s not doing enough.”

When you read that Times piece, you may find yourself most struck by the 29-year-old Black construction manager in Texas who said he’s happy that Trump has kept his promises, if only because the Texan then says, “Although these are some hard decisions — a couple of friends that have been deported, stuff like that. So I’m sad at the same time.”

It must warm his deported friends’ hearts to hear that their buddy is kinda sad.

I wasted my hard-earned money on some forgettable thing when I was young, and when I turned to my mom for comfort, all she did was shrug and say, “Bought sense is the best sense.” I’ve come to agree with that, but I’ve also learned that a costly mistake doesn’t necessarily confer sense upon the person who made it.

Pain that was intolerable under Biden is apparently a welcome burden now.

Though inflation hit the whole world after the Covid pandemic — which started almost a year before President Joe Biden took office — higher prices, especially for food, were often cited by Trump supporters as reason enough to vote against Harris, Biden’s vice president.

But pain that was intolerable under Biden is apparently a welcome burden now.

The Times’ moderator asked that group of self-described independent Trump voters to spell out the limits of their tolerance for short-term pain: “What percent increase in cost would you be OK with, if we were talking about groceries, rent, gas?”

“Maybe 5 percent, 10 percent?” a 38-year-old white homemaker in Utah said. “Just kind of depends. It’s not going to get fixed overnight. It’s not even going to get fixed in four years of Trump. It’s going to hurt extremely hard before we get through on the other side.”

Would I be willing to pay more for food, gas and rent if I thought it would help bring about a better America? I would. Although it’s unclear how paying more would bring about that better America. Furthermore, my better America wouldn’t include cuts to cancer researchthreats to Medicaida trillion-dollar Pentagon budget or a president who foments rage against the idea of diversity, equity and inclusion.

Soon after the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, I suggested that Republicans genuflecting before Trump sounded like the title character in the biblical Book of Job who says of the Almighty, “Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him.” It seems even more true today.

Consider Bradley Bartell, the Wisconsin Trump supporter whose Peruvian wife was snatched up by ICE at an airport despite the work the couple had put in for her to obtain U.S. citizenship. “I’ve received a lot of hateful messages, plenty of people saying we deserve this,” he told Newsweek. But he said, “I don’t regret the vote.”

Years from now, we’ll likely still be struggling to understand this devotion to Trump by people being harmed by him.

Instead, he seemed sure Trump would realize that it’s wrong for ICE to arrest folks like his wife and fix a broken system. His wife was released on $3,000 bond after 49 days in ICE custody. “I understand Trump is doing his job as president,” Camila Muñoz said, “but the cases should move more quickly if people aren’t associated with a gang or don’t have a criminal record.”

Years from now, we’ll likely still be struggling to understand this unyielding devotion to Trump by people being harmed by him. The answer may be more easily found in the study of psychology than in politics.

But in the meantime, it seems futile to demand expressions of remorse from Trump’s voters. They’re all in.

Even now.

Jarvis DeBerry

Jarvis DeBerry is an opinion editor for BLN Daily.

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The Dictatorship

Trump’s plans for Americans’ data become clearer – and leave tech experts alarmed

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Trump’s plans for Americans’ data become clearer – and leave tech experts alarmed

Happy Tuesday. Here’s your Tuesday Tech Dropthe past week’s top stories from the intersection of technology and politics.

Trump’s data dreams

In recent months, there’s been widespread speculation over the Trump administration’s reported plans to work with controversial tech company Palantir to compile a massive database of Americans’ personal information. Now we have a bit of clarity on how some of that data could be used.

NPR reported Monday that the administration has developed a national citizenship data system that it wants states to use to crack down on noncitizen voters — a fascination of Donald Trump’s, despite the lack of evidence that such voters have affected the result of any U.S. election. One wonders whether and how this tool might be used to fuel Trump’s conspiracy theories.

Experts have raised concerns about the accuracy of the data being used, as well as whether this administration — which is currently trying to ramp up efforts to strip some Americans of their citizenship — can be trusted to deploy this tool ethically.

Read more at NPR.

Canada axes digital tax

Trump did the bidding of large tech companies when he said Friday that he was ending trade negotiations with Canada in response to the country’s digital services tax on tech companies — foreign and domestic — that was set to go into effect on the last day of June. Canada then rescinded the tax.

Read more at CNBC.

AI moratorium’s mortality

After a tentative deal appeared to have been reached between Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., it appears a 10-year ban on states instituting regulations around artificial intelligence has been dropped from Republicans’ budget bill. For now.

Read more at Time.

Musk’s ‘fixer’ reportedly no longer at Tesla

One of the top executives at Tesla — Omead Afshar, who has been called Elon Musk’s “fixer” by The Wall Street Journal — has reportedly left the company. Tesla has been mired in a sales slump and ongoing tumult, partially stemming from backlash over Musk’s role in crafting Trump’s policies.

Read more at Forbes.

Bezos’ outreach to Trump

The Wall Street Journal reported that Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos has been cozying up to Trump, in an effort that the newspaper frames as an attempt to secure funding for Bezos’ aerospace company, Blue Origin, and capitalize on Trump’s rift with Musk.

Read more at The Wall Street Journal.

FTC puts its finger on the scale

Republicans have sought to crack the whip on companies that choose not to advertise on right-wing media platforms — in some cases, because said platforms have been known to promote hate speech. The Trump administration has made clear that it has no issue with holding up corporate mergers in order to extract political concessions, and that seems to have been the case last week when Trump’s handpicked FTC chairman announced that he was approving a merger of large advertising firms on the condition that the newly formed organization doesn’t take part in any ad boycotts based on political or ideological viewpoints.

Read more at Ars Technica.

Anti-ICE app

As Americans look for ways to navigate a country in which Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents — many of them masked — are seizing people off the streets and placing them in detention facilities, one developer has launched an app, ICEBlock, that tips people off as to where ICE agents have been sighted. The Trump administration, which has sought to crack down on reporting on ICE raids, clearly isn’t happy about this creation and responded — in dictatorial fashion — by threatening the app’s developer with DOJ scrutiny and even threatening CNN with prosecution for reporting on the app.

Read more at CNN.

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

The conservative wing of the Supreme Court just gave Democrats a potent weapon

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The conservative wing of the Supreme Court just gave Democrats a potent weapon

In a string of cases Friday, the conservative justices on the Supreme Court handed the Republican Party win after win. The court restricted nationwide injunctions against President Donald Trump’s order on birthright citizenship, greatly hindering the powers of lower federal courts to constrain the president. It allowed parents to opt their kids out of public school education that offended their religious upbringing. And it let the state of Texas require age verification before anyone looks at online porn.

There is no question that each of these cases is a significant victory for conservatives in the short term. However, each also gives liberals an opening to try to accomplish their policy goals, but only if they are willing to be aggressive and break norms they’ve previously wanted to maintain.

Justice Sotomayor’s tit-for-tat warning was directed at the justices in the majority, but it could also be seen as an invitation to Democrats.

First, in the birthright citizenship case, the Supreme Court’s six Republican-appointed justices addressed a procedural question, not the issue of whether the president’s order rejecting the idea of birthright citizenship is unconstitutional (even though it clearly is under the Fourteenth Amendment and federal statutory law). On the procedural issue, the court held that lower federal court orders stopping the president’s unlawful actions could apply only to the people who brought those cases. In other words, even if a president issues a plainly unconstitutional order, all lower courts can do is provide relief to the individuals who had the foresight and resources to sue in federal court. The order cannot apply to everyone else in the country.

Yes, there are some exceptions. Cases can be brought as class actions, meaning a small number of people can bring the case on behalf of all other people in the country like them, but the court has spent the past two decades making such cases harder to bring. Also, states might be able to sue on behalf of their citizens and get nationwide relief under the theory that a citizen of, say, New Jersey, travels to other states and needs protection there. However, several justices have been skeptical of cases brought on behalf of others, so the future viability of such a strategy is unknown. Finally, never shy about giving itself more power, the Supreme Court said it can issue nationwide injunctions.

However, the court’s holding against universal injunctions from lower court judges is now the law of the land. And as a legal rule, in theory, this decision should apply in all cases regarding universal injunctions, not just cases brought against Republican policies. Justice Sonia Sotomayor recognized this in her dissenting opinion: “Today, the threat is to birthright citizenship. Tomorrow, a different administration may try to seize firearms from law-abiding citizens or prevent people of certain faiths from gathering to worship.”

Justice Sotomayor’s tit-for-tat warning was directed at the justices in the majority, but it could also be seen as an invitation to Democrats willing to push boundaries. The next Democrat in the Oval Office or even Democrats now in charge of state governments can look at the Supreme Court decision and take new actions knowing that lower courts shouldn’t have the power to issue nationwide or statewide injunctions stopping them.

A health care directive promoting reproductive freedom? An executive order forgiving student loans? A state initiative that restricts gun sales? A vaccination requirement that some religious people object to? An environmental directive that might infringe on some business’ claimed right? After Friday’s decision, even if these policies are challenged before very conservative federal judgesthose judges shouldn’t have the power to stop these Democratic actions beyond just the parties to the case, no matter how unlawful or unconstitutional these judges believe them to be.

Some or all of these actions might not survive the court’s eventual scrutiny.

Liberals can apply the same thinking to the Supreme Court’s ruling about LGBTQ+ books and religious exemptions. In that case, the conservative majority said that schools that teach books that burden parents’ religious beliefs violate the Constitution’s guarantee of free exercise of religion. In order to avoid this, schools must offer kids an opt-out so they aren’t forced to learn about gay marriage or trans people. Critics of the court’s decision worry that parents might cite their faith to push back against books that include depictions of interracial marriage, women in the workplace or evolution.

But liberals can have beliefs grounded in religion, too. Which means they, too, can throw a monkey wrench into the system on behalf of their liberal agenda. For instance, schools around the country are adopting “Baby Olivia” videos to promote anti-abortion views. A religious family who believes bodily autonomy and women’s rights are central to their religion can object and force the school to create an opt-out process.

Finally, there’s the age verification case involving online porn. In this case, the conservative justices said that while adults have the right to view pornography, minors don’t. Thus, Texas is allowed to put what the majority of the court viewed as a minimal burden on adults — the online age verification process — in order to stop minors from viewing porn, even though some adults viewed the process as violating their privacy.

Once again, liberals can play this game, as well. For instance, if Texas wants age verification for porn websites, California could require age verification for websites that sell or advertise guns.

Sure, some or all of these actions might not survive the court’s eventual scrutiny. Each of the doctrines at issue in these cases and hypotheticals have exceptions and complicated sub-rules. Moreover, if the Supreme Court doesn’t care about law and cares only about furthering a conservative ideological agenda, it will find a way to rule against liberal causes and politicians while ruling for conservatives.

But Democrats and liberals need to force the court’s hand by using these supposedly neutral rules to push their own agenda. The court may be tilted ideologically against them, but that doesn’t mean giving up ahead of time. Instead, they should use the tools given to them to accomplish their policy goals and dare the Supreme Court to display blatant hypocrisy by stopping them.

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The Dictatorship

Jury reaches partial verdict in Sean Combs trial, unable to reach verdict on Count One

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Jury reaches partial verdict in Sean Combs trial, unable to reach verdict on Count One
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