The Dictatorship
Trump’s Truth Social post highlights a key betrayal of farmers. Here’s what he omits.
President Donald Trump has for years dismissed critics of his mass deportation program as simply not understanding his policy genius. But in a rare apparent concession, the president posted to Truth Social on Thursday seeming to acknowledge how his immigration raids in particular have impacted American farmers.
“Our great farmers and people in the Hotel and Leisure business have been stating that our very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace,” Trump wrote. “That is not good…Changes are coming!”
For once, he’s right.
Trump and his Republican supporters swept into office last year thanks to big promises to help America’s forgotten small farmers. Instead, they’ve pillaged the land for cash and left struggling farmers with the bill. Farmers have warned their Republican lawmakers for months that mass deportations and tariff battles would cripple rural states’ agricultural economies. Battered by trade wars, Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids and a budget that slashes their take-home payAmerica’s farmers have been fighting for their livelihoods. It’s a fight that could rattle the foundations of the GOP’s electoral coalition just as voters begin thinking about next year’s midterm elections.
Farmers from California to Nebraska have shuttered operations in the wake of raids that carted off dozens of workers.
Trump’s ever-expanding use of ICE deportation raids made new waves this past week after anti-ICE protests broke out in Los Angelesand Republicans reflexively focused on disparaging a Democratic city in turmoil. In reality, Trump’s ICE raids have played out in red states like Nebraskatoo, albeit without the same heavy TV coverage.
Farmers from California to Nebraska have shuttered operations in the wake of raids that carted off dozens of workers. In Florida, Trump voter Vincent Scardina choked back tears as he described a raid where ICE detained six of his longtime employees, all Nicaraguan men, The Daily Beast reported. Those men represent a third of Scardina’s staff, and he has no idea how his business will replace them while staying afloat.
After the president promised to focus his efforts on capturing “dangerous criminals,” Trump’s broad ICE raids feel like a betrayal to many farmers. The workers and families picked up in farm raids aren’t bloodthirsty gang members Republicans talk so much about. In many cases they are longtime family friends and senior team members. In one January raid that resulted in the arrests of over 1,200 people, nearly half of them had no criminal record at all.
Farmers have also had to internalize a deep sense of unfairness in Trump’s policies. The factory farms and meatpacking companies that donate to Republicans by a two-to-one margin have so far been spared ICE raids despite being among the nation’s biggest exploiters of illegal migrant labor. In an industry where two-thirds of workers are here illegallyfederal enforcement seems to be falling almost exclusively on the smallest — and poorest — offenders.
If the relationship between Republicans and their rural base was already strained over immigration, Trump’s brutal federal spending cuts sent things into a deep freeze. In April, the U.S. Department of Agriculture slashed over $1 billion from a federal food-purchasing program that served as a lifeline for farmers in Iowa, North Dakota and across the plains. Anna Pesek, who owns Over the Moon Farm, told the North Dakota Monitor that Trump’s cuts would shrink her business by about 10% and worsen her already tight profit margins. Follow the supply chain and you’ll also find that rural food banks depend on that program to stock food for hungry families.
Again, not everyone is suffering equally. Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill proposes even more cuts to USDA support programs that form the backbone of a small farmer’s life and business. House Republicans have proposed the deepest cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program in history, amounting to over $300 billion in reductions. For the farmers who supply SNAP with healthy produce, those cuts mean devastating income losses and even farm closures.
The world looks a lot different if you run one of the megafarms owned by a multinational corporation like Cargill. Big agribusiness spent over $178 million on federal lobbying last year, and in return Trump’s budget showers America’s richest farmers with billions of dollars in subsidies. Taxpayer money that once supported rural schools, food banks, adult education centers and health clinics will instead help megafarms drive even more small farmers out of business.
Despite asking the small farmers who voted for him to accept massive cuts in federal support, Trump’s budget still expands USDA’s budget by $56.6 billion. Almost all of that increase — $52.3 billion — comes in the form of expanded subsidies that are mostly claimed by industrial farms growing key staple crops. Indiana’s 25,000 small farmers may be losing their local health clinics and workers, but at least the executives at Archer Daniels Midland can afford another round of bonuses.
All of that unhappiness is causing serious problems for Republicans in areas that used to be political strongholds. Trump’s approval recently fell to a low of 38%driven in large part by erosion in the GOP’s core support. Rural voters have consistently supported Trump at the ballot box, and he even improved his numbers with them last year, to a record 63%. Those days are over: An NPR/PBS/Marist poll conducted in April found that only 4 in 10 rural voters approve of Trump today.
Republican lawmakers know how difficult it will be to hold critical swing districts if they stay this unpopular with core constituencies like heartland farmers. That puts the House Republicans who represent rural areas in a real bind, because they have no good answers for Trump’s betrayal of family farmers. Back in February, seven of Wisconsin’s GOP lawmakers simply didn’t show up for a community forum hosted by the Wisconsin Farmers Union. Running from your voters isn’t a winning strategy.
Faced with the mounting political cost of his policy failures on rural Americans, Trump now promises that “Changes are coming!” The millions of farmers who helped send him to the White House last year are done waiting.

Max Burns is a Democratic strategist and founder of Third Degree Strategies. Find him on X, @themaxburns.
The Dictatorship
The DOJ has a death penalty wish list. And firing squads aren’t even the worst part.
ByAustin Sarat
After the Justice Department released a report Friday to “Restore and Strengthen the Federal Death Penalty,” the national and international public rightly focused on the DOJ’s recommendation to bring back the firing squad as an execution method. The firing squad is a particularly brutal way to put someone to death. Unlike lethal injection, which seeks to mask the horror it inflicts on the executed, the firing squad turns execution into a spectacle of cruelty for those who witness it.
The firing squad is a particularly brutal way to put someone to death.
But the first mention of a firing squad appears on page 30 of Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche’s 52-page document. The parts of the report that precede and follow the first mention of that execution method are even more troubling. There, we find the DOJ whitewashing the racism and arbitrariness that have long characterized the federal death penalty and laying out a plan to dramatically curtail the rights of people held on death row.
As much as death penalty opponents are right to call out Blanche and the DOJ for embracing the barbarity of the firing squad, they need to also highlight the department’s seeming eagerness to kill people, its dismissal of evidence that the death penalty is unfairly applied and its complete disdain for the previous administration’s capital punishment record.
Indeed, the report is mostly a political hit job on former President Joe Biden from a White House that remains fixated on trying to discredit him and his administration. While seeking to revive federal executions, it devotes page after page to attacking the former president and former Attorney General Merrick Garland. It takes Garland to task for scaling back federal death penalty prosecutions, imposing a moratorium on executions and recommending that Biden commute the sentences of 37 of the 40 people on the federal death row. As for those commutations, the report accuses Biden of doing great damage “to the rule of law itself.”

That’s pretty rich coming from an administration that has done so much to hollow out the meaning and practical effect of the rule of law.
In its report, the DOJ devotes 15 pages to the history of capital punishment in the U.S.: five pages to the years 1789 to 2021 and 10 pages to Biden’s single term. Though its authors don’t acknowledge it, this disproportionate focus on the alleged errors of former Attorney General Garland and the president he served suggests that Trump and his allies want to increase the number of executions for political reasons.
Apparently, in the eyes of the Trump administration, Garland’s worst sin was his direction to the Department of Justice that persons accused of capital crimes and those who are awaiting execution be treated “fairly and humanely.”
The well-documented defects of the federal death penalty aren’t even mentioned in the Justice Department report.
The well-documented defects of the federal death penalty aren’t even mentioned in the Justice Department report. But it is clear that race plays a troubling role in federal executions just like it does in state executions.
Data compiled by the Death Penalty Information Center shows that from 1989 to June 2024, “73% of individuals authorized for federal capital prosecution were people of color.” In addition, “Of all the people federally sentenced to death, 60% (48 out of 80) have been people of color. The overrepresentation of non-white defendants persists despite the Department of Justice’s commitment to a ‘race blind’ approach to reviewing and approving capital prosecutions.”
It is clear that the victim’s race matterstoo. As the American Civil Liberties Union has rightly observed“By continuing to authorize the death penalty disproportionately for cases with White victims, the federal government is sending the intolerable message that it values the life of a White person more than the life of a person of color.”
The death penalty’s discriminatory application, along with well-documented instances of false convictions in capital cases, require that all capital cases be carefully scrutinized. You would never know that from reading the Justice Department report.
Quite the opposite.
The report recommends that the department “examine existing Supreme Court precedent to identify whether certain decisions, especially regarding categorical exemptions for certain crimes or defendants, are inconsistent with the 8th amendment.” The one example it offers is a Supreme Court case that held that the death penalty is unconstitutional “‘for the rape of a child where the crime did not result, and was not intended to result, in death of the victim.’”
Moreover, the Justice Department report wants to expedite appellate review in capital cases and to “prevent capital defendants from attempting to delay their executions by filing” what it calls “meritless legal challenges.”
The Trump Justice Department’s desire to bring back the firing squad should shock and offend every American. In comparison with other execution methods, the firing squad has not been used very often. Texas A & M’s Michael Conklin offers an explanation: “Hurling projectiles toward an inmate in the hopes of causing cardiac failure, asphyxiation, or some other condition that will result in death, is far from an exact science.” And when it has been used, as South Carolina Professor Mark Smith told The Associated Press last yearit has created “a vision of terror.”
But whatever its preferred execution method, all Americans should be offended by this administration’s politically motivated agenda to short-circuit reviews of death cases in a system that’s notoriously plagued by racial discrimination and other miscarriages of justice.
Austin Sarat
Austin Sarat is the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science at Amherst College. The views expressed here do not represent Amherst College.
The Dictatorship
Israel’s new ‘buffer zone’ in Lebanon is a huge gift to Hezbollah
ByHussein Ibish
The killing of veteran Lebanese journalist Khalil’s charity last Wednesday represents among the worst elements of the renewed fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, particularly the dangers to civilians posed by Israel’s new “buffer zone.” And if Israeli military officials are to be believed, the goal may be to create a huge area under permanent Israeli control.
On March 1, Hezbollah launched a salvo of projectiles, after which Israel demanded all civilians leave all of southern Lebanon that lies south of the Litani River. Over a million people left their homes and flooded into Beirut. While working as a journalist within that zone, Khalil was killed by IDF troops (and a colleague of hers was severely injured).
Khalil’s employer, Lebanese government officials and rights groups said Khalil’s car was clearly marked and rescue workers were prevented from reaching her for hours as she slowly died under rubble. Israeli officials said they were in a car that left a Hezbollah-linked building driving toward the “yellow line” delineation of a new “buffer zone” in southern Lebanon.
The overwhelming backlash I witnessed created political space for a clear repudiation of Hezbollah’s militia status and authorization for the Lebanese Armed Forces to disarm the group.
Israel has cast Khalil as a Hezbollah operative and, thus, a legitimate target. She worked for Al Akhbar, a newspaper with pro-Hezbollah sympathies, but there is no evidence Khalil was anything other than a reporter. It cannot go unnoticed that Israel has a long history of killing troublesome journalists such as Shireen Abu Akhleha Palestinian American Al Jazeera reporter who was shot to death in 2022 while wearing a clearly marked blue vest labeled “PRESS” in the occupied West Bank.
The war in southern Lebanon has followed Israel’s Gaza playbook: near-total depopulation and destruction. The aim has been to deny Hezbollah any supportive environment by removing the entire society.
But the IDF’s new “yellow line” map suggests Israel wants to gobble up a large chunk of Lebanese territory south of the Litani that it has been coveting since the early 1950squite possibly to divert waters from that river and the Wazzani River (both of which flow down from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights) and cut Lebanon off from one of its two offshore gas fields. There is far more potentially at play here than just security or “buffer zone.”
And it’s all likely to backfire and strengthen Hezbollah. The Lebanese government, which has shown a greater willingness to confront and contain Hezbollah than it has in the past, has been compelled to strongly denounce Israel’s conduct. Protests by Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam and President Joseph Aounechoing the Committee to Protect Journalists and other groups, indicate how badly Israel has misread the political equation.

Salam and Aoun led the cabinet in immediately denouncing Hezbollah for resuming hostilities and engineered a hitherto unthinkable unanimous cabinet decision identifying all of the organization’s paramilitary activities and arsenal illegal, unconstitutional and banned. Even Hezbollah’s Shiite allies in the cabinet from the Amal party endorsed the decision.
I was in Lebanon from late January to mid-March, and the overwhelming backlash I witnessed created political space for a clear repudiation of Hezbollah’s militia status and authorization for the Lebanese Armed Forces to disarm the group.
Lebanese Armed Forces Cmdr. Gen. Rodolphe Haykal, however, fears the military could split over a confrontation with Hezbollah, and he doesn’t want to be blamed for any resulting civil conflict. While Lebanese political leaders have tried to convince the military to move against the group in key southern areas, Israel has sabotaged them by overreaching.
The displacement of almost everyone in the south, combined with the new IDF map suggesting a major land grab plus potential diversion of water and Israeli control over Lebanese offshore gas, has alarmed even those most opposed to Hezbollah in Lebanon.

But a new Israeli occupation will not produce calm. Instead, it will take Hezbollah back to its 1982 founding mission: battling Israeli occupation troops in southern Lebanon. An Israeli land grab or occupation is an ideal scenario for Hezbollah’s paramilitary rebuilding and political rehabilitation, following the devastating 2023-2024 war that was triggered when Hezbollah launched attacks on Israel in solidarity with Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks.
Khalil was killed during a Trump administration-brokered ceasefire, which was recently extended by another three weeks. But Israel plainly only agreed to this pause, which neither side has fully respected, under U.S. pressure. The Lebanese and Israeli ambassadors to the U.S. have met twice in person at the State Department, demonstrating Israel has an unprecedented opportunity to deal with a Lebanese government that wants Hezbollah disarmed and contained, and it is willing to negotiate diplomatic normalization with Israel — unthinkable until now.
But Israel has not accepted that the only alternative to a Hezbollah-dominated Lebanon is a strengthened Lebanese state run with authority from Beirut through the LAF. And it has faced a Lebanese government that unanimously has endorsed that, but by trying to depopulate, devastate and occupy much of the south, while seemingly gobbling up Lebanese water and natural gas.
Israel has made it as difficult as possible for political leaders in Beirut to move against Hezbollah.
But a new Israeli occupation will not produce calm. Instead, it will take Hezbollah back to its 1982 founding mission: battling Israeli occupation troops in southern Lebanon.
Whatever Israel says, virtually no one in Lebanon believes Khalil was a fighter or operative for Hezbollah. The seemingly casual way in which she was dispatched, and especially the apparent blocking of rescue crews for many crucial hours while she was under the rubble, reinforces a belief in Lebanon that Israel is on an irrational rampage.
The political costs this has imposed on leaders such as Salam and Aoun, who want the same thing Israel says it does — a disarmed and contained Hezbollah — have been almost prohibitive. Yet they have persisted with negotiations, while explaining they are just trying to “save Lebanon.”
Yet the U.S.-imposed ceasefire is heavily dependent on Washington’s negotiations to end hostilities with Tehran. President Donald Trump has said Iran must end financial support for Hezbollah, but his administration’s war goals and demands have been constantly in flux since the war began. For now, Israel and Hezbollah have continued to blame each other for limited violations and portraying themselves as respecting the truce. Yet it will only last another three weeks.
If Israel returns to the fighting as soon as possible, as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has given every impression of wanting to do, and continues imposing a new occupation in southern Lebanon, along with apparent efforts to seize Lebanese water and natural gas, the narrow and delicate political opportunity for the Lebanese state to take a hard line with Hezbollah will be squandered. Nothing could be better calculated to salvage Hezbollah from its own endless blunders and miscalculations, and provide the group a golden opportunity to rebuild militarily and politically.
We have seen this movie many times before, so we know how it ends: very badly for Lebanese and Israelis alike. The only winners will be in Tehran.
Hussein Ibish
Hussein Ibish is a senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.
The Dictatorship
Black Army captain accuses supervisor — a chaplain — of racist threat
A Black woman who serves as an officer in the U.S. Army has come out with allegations of racism that paint a disturbing picture of the culture Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has helped harbor at the Pentagon.
The allegations raise fresh questions about the military’s treatment of Black personnel — in particularBlack women — amid bigoted attacks on diversity by Hegseth and his underlings.
They also raise questions about the supposed “top-down cultural shift” Hegseth has vowed to oversee among military chaplains — essentially, spiritual guides — whom the secretary has derided for offering service members “emotional support.”
Army Capt. Tatyana Jordan spoke with Military.com about what she faced after experiencing what she interpreted as a racist threat from Chaplain Maj. Edward Blackledge, Jordan’s supervisor at the Army’s Institute for Religious Leadership:
According to Jordan, on Aug. 13, 2025, her supervisor, Chaplain Maj. Edward Blackledge, instructed a religious affairs noncommissioned officer (NCO) to patch a hole in the office they all shared. The NCO was suffering from an injury to his arm or hand that made the project difficult for days on end.
Due to being unable to execute the task and cut into the drywall, Jordan volunteered to do it instead and said she would still complete her TRADOC (U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command) analysis for later that same afternoon.
That was when Blackledge allegedly said the following to her: ‘You need to focus on getting that spreadsheet done before the meeting or I’ll need to tie you to a tree and beat you.’
During the era of chattel slavery, enslaved Black people were often tied to trees and whipped as a form of racist torturewhich their slave drivers used to bring them into submission.
Jordan said she would “never forget” her supervisor’s statement, telling Military.com that it evoked thoughts of anti-Black lynchings:
This was not said in isolation. It was said by a senior leader, in uniform, in a professional Army environment. As a Black woman, that statement carried a weight far beyond the words themselves. It evoked a deeply painful and violent history in this country: lynching, racial terror, and the dehumanization of people who look like me.
Jordan also told Military.com that Blackledge told her at the time that he was “joking,” but that she still reported the incident to military police. She said the police chalked up the comments to being a “bad joke” and that a call to the Army’s inspector general’s office made clear that “IG wanted nothing to do” with the situation.
The Defense Department did not immediately respond to MS NOW’s request for comment.
Military.com got access to an investigative report the Army conducted on the alleged incident. The outlet notes that the report, which MS NOW has not independently confirmed, includes a sworn statement from Blackledge claiming he “never made racial jokes” about anyone in the Army. He apparently went on to say he didn’t remember making the “tie you to a tree” remark before conceding he told Jordan he would have to “punch her in the face.”
According to the report:
‘I do not recall making the statement, ‘I need to tie you to a tree and beat you,’’ Blackledge said in his statement. ‘I’m not denying that I said it, but I do not recall making that statement. I do recall telling CPT Jordan, in jest, that I would have to punch her in the face if she did not complete a specific project on time. I may have made the alleged statement during the same conversation.’
Here, we see a prime example showing why — at minimum — the U.S. military is in dire need of the very diversity, equity and inclusion efforts that people like Hegseth have long decried. The defense secretary and his allies would have us believe that the U.S. military and its leadership are naturally sensible and at risk of distraction by conversations about properly welcoming women and nonwhite people into the ranks.
But that doesn’t square with the story of a female Black Army captain being intimidated with a threat that sounds eerily close to slave torture.
Ja’han Jones is an MS NOW opinion blogger. He previously wrote The ReidOut Blog.
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