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Trump Sells Fear. Here's How We Fight Back. | David Pepper & Lisa Senecal

Trump has declared war on American cities — literally.

A drought that leaves towns rationing water and farms at risk of failure is more than an environmental crisis; it’s a democratic one. When basic stability disappears, trust in institutions erodes with it. Both Vermont and Ohio now serve as reminders that climate denial isn’t neutral — it’s sabotage that guarantees shortages will turn into political fractures. Systems people thought they could rely on are showing their limits in real time.

The rot shows up in politics the same way. Trump’s marathon rant before the generals wasn’t a glitch but a feature: Chaos presented as command, incoherence normalized as leadership. If the nation learns to accept that performance as routine, then the line between governance and authoritarian theater dissolves. The danger is not one outrageous moment but the accumulation of seventy minutes of it, again and again.

Manufactured fear is the tool used to cover that decay. Footage of troops in cities or fights replayed on loop creates a false sense of collapse for audiences who will never see daily life in those places. Vibrant communities get flattened into symbols of threat, feeding the idea that control is safety. The more disconnected people are from urban reality, the easier it is to sell them panic as policy.

Against that machine, scale matters. Suppression has billionaires and full-time infrastructure, while defenders of democracy still treat it like a side project. The opportunity is to embed participation into daily life: clinics registering patients, book clubs sharing ballots, senior centers ensuring residents are on the rolls. When civic action becomes ordinary rather than exceptional, fear loses its monopoly and democracy becomes harder to starve.

Tune in for Lisa Senecal and David Pepper as they cut through the noise, expose the fear tactics, and remind us how everyday action keeps democracy alive.

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Trump's Speech to Generals Is Greeted by the Sound of Silence | The Strategy Session

Trump's Speech to Generals Is Greeted by the Sound of Silence | The Strategy Session

Trump’s and Hegseth’s speech to a hall of generals Tuesday was supposed to project strength, but the silence in the room told another story. Mike Madrid called it a warning sign: “There was a much more tepid response than I think he was anticipating.” Soldiers who swear to the Constitution aren’t eager to become regime muscle, and hesitation at that scale matters. When a commander in chief brands political opponents as the “enemy within,” the danger isn’t hypothetical—it’s the groundwork for domestic crackdowns.

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