Sunday, July 19, 2020

Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman and “The Statue of Liberty”

by MARK GABRISH CONLAN

Copyright © 2020 by Mark Gabrish Conlan for Zenger’s Newsmagazine • All rights reserved

On July 4, 2020 KPBS, San Diego’s affiliate of the Public Broadcasting System (PBS), showed an odd assemblage of programs to commemorate America’s Independence Day. One was the 40th anniversary installment of the annual A Capitol Fourth concert, usually a mass gathering of performers and audience on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. but this year, under the lash of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, performed largely in empty spaces and mostly pre-recorded, with the big moments (like the traditional performance of the last four minutes of Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture) supplied as clips from previous A Capitol Fourth concerts.
One was a local program KPBS filmed itself on August 30, 2019 featuring the San Diego Symphony under its “pops” conductor, Christopher Dragon, performing an all-Tchaikovsky concert including the rare Souvenir of a Dear Place for violin and orchestra. The other pieces were familiar: the 1812 Overture (all of it this time, though still climaxed with fireworks and cannons), Marche Slave, eight numbers from the ballet Swin Lake and the last movement from the Fourth Symphony.
The third program, which they showed both before and after the concert specials, was an hour-long film from 1985 called The Statue of Liberty, produced and directed by Ken Burns. Yes, that Ken Burns, in only his fourth film project (its predecessors were Brooklyn Bridge, The Shakers: Hands to Work, Hearts to God, and Huey Long — about the progressive and/or quasi-fascist governor who ruled Louisiana from 1928 to his assassination in 1935), made five years before his mini-series The Civil War made Burns’ reputation for mega-documentaries and his trademark approach of using still photos to reproduce events that happened before movie cameras existed and having actors read from letters, newspaper stories or other period sources as his soundtrack.
The Statue of Liberty became oddly timely towards the end of 2019 because of an intriguing sequence Burns put in the film towards its end. Though he had earlier noted that the original intent of the Statue of Liberty was not to symbolize America’s embrace of immigrants, he acknowledged that the Statue had acquired that meaning over the years. He did that by showing some then-recent immigrants to the U.S. and posing them in front of the statue, including a Ukrainian family his chyron identified only as “The Vindmans.” They consisted of a father and twin sons, Alexander and Yevgeny, who had emigrated to the U.S. from Ukraine in 1979 following the death of the boys’ mother.
During the next 34 years, the Vindmans lived the American dream. Alexander and Yevgeny both joined the U.S. Army via the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) and rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel. Both were assigned to the staff of the National Security Council (NSC), where precisely because they were from Ukraine and therefore spoke the Ukrainian language they were specifically called on as experts on Ukraine. Their job was essentially to help the U.S. navigate the thickets of Ukrainian politics and the country’s difficult and contentious divorce from Russia in the aftermath of the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991.
Tbe Vindmans’ job as America’s “Ukraine whisperers” got a lot harder in 2014, when Russian president Vladimir Putin ordered an army to invade Ukraine and seize the Crimea, including its all-important fresh-water port on the Black Sea. And it got even more difficult in 2017, when Donald Trump got elected U.S. President and showed an embarrassing and confounding level of fealty to Putin and his world-political desires, including piecing back together as much of the Tsarist and Soviet “Greater Russia” as he could. Though Trump was willing to sign a Congressional bill to give military aid to Ukraine against Russia — which his predecessor Barack Obama hadn’t — he insisted that newly elected Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky “do us a favor, though” in exchange for receiving the aid.
It was actually two favors. One was to return the computer server on which Hillary Clinton had supposedly stored her deleted e-mails and shipped off to Ukraine. She hadn’t — the server she used remains where it always was, in Washington, D.C. — but Right-wing media propagandists and conspiracy-minded bloggers had apparently convinced Trump it was in Ukraine. The other was that Zelensky reinstate an investigation of Burisma, a Ukrainian energy company on whose board of directors former vice-president Joe Biden’s son Hunter had once sat, which had been started by a former Ukrainian state prosecutor Ukraine’s previous president had fired for not being aggressive enough in investigating corruption.
Though Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had wisely tried to avoid impeaching Trump — she knew there wouldn’t be enough Republican votes in the Senate to convict him and remove him from office no matter what he’d done — the public outcry surrounding Trump’s apparent attempt to bribe the leader of a foreign country to dig up dirt on his likely 2020 re-election opponent led the House Judiciary Committee to begin an impeachment investigation.
One of the people who testified was Alexander Vindman, who on October 27, 2019 — a day before he spoke to the committee — released a written statement in which he said, “In Spring of 2019, I became aware of outside influencers promoting a false and alternative narrative of Ukraine inconsistent with the consensus views of the interagency, [which was] harmful to U.S. national security [and also] undermined U.S. Government efforts to expand cooperation with Ukraine.” The “outside influencers” included former U.S. Attorney and New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and two Russian-born associates of his named Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman.
As part of his job as the NSC’s Director of European Affairs, Alexander Vindman listened in on the July 25, 2019 phone call between Trump and Zelensky in which Trump demanded “a favor” from Zelensky in exchange for his aid. “I was concerned by the call,” Vindman wrote in his statement. “I did not think it was proper to demand that a foreign government investigate a U.S. citizen, and I was worried about the implications for the U.S. Government’s support of Ukraine. I realized that if Ukraine pursued an investigation into the Bidens and Burisma, it would likely be interpreted as a partisan play which would undoubtedly result in Ukraine losing the bipartisan support it has thus far maintained. This would all undermine U.S. national security.”
Trump, with his notorious demands for “loyalty” and his instinct to take revenge against anyone, especially within the government, who criticizes him, fired Alexander Vindman from his NSC post. For good measure, Trump also fired Vindman’s twin brother Yevgeny even though Yevgeny had had nothing to do with the impeachment hearings. But Trump wasn’t through with his revenge on Alexander Vindman: this year acting defense secretary Mark Esper refused to confirm that Vindman was getting the automatic promotion to full colonel to which his years of service entitled him.
In early July U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-Wisconsin), herself a combat veteran who lost both her legs in Iraq, threatened to hold up all 1,000 scheduled promotions of senior military officers until she received an adequate explanation for why Alexander Vindman was being denied his. On July 8, four days after KPBS had shown Ken Burns’ film featuring Alexander and Yevgeny Vindman as 10-year-old recent immigrants to the U.S., Alexander resigned from the U.S. military. Though he didn’t release a statement explaining why, his attorney, David Pressman, did.
“Over the last months, LTC Vindman has been guided by a very simple and very American principle: ‘Here, right matters,’” Pressman’s statement said. “He has spoken publicly once, and only pursuant to a subpoena from the United States Congress. Compelled to testify, this decorated soldier was thrust into a conversation that goes to the heart of our country’s values, and its future. Through a campaign of bullying, intimidation, and retaliation, the President of the United States attempted to force LTC Vindman to choose: Between adhering to the law or pleasing a President. Between honoring his oath or protecting his career. Between protecting his promotion or the promotion of his fellow soldiers. These are choices that no one in the United States should confront, especially one who has dedicated his life to serving it.”

How the Statue Got Here

Burns, who co-wrote and co-photographed the film The Statue of Liberty as well as directing it, began with impressionistic photography of the Statue of Liberty as David McCullough (who narrated most of Burns’ projects until he dropped out of the series and Peter Coyote replaced him) intoned the words of Thomas Jefferson from the Declaration of Independence: “We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; and that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
Then Burns goes into the historical background of how the Statue of Liberty came to exist in the first place. The statue was the brainchild of French sculptor Frédéric Auguste Bertholdi, who conceived of the project in 1865 — the year the North won the U.S. Civil War — after a discussion with a friend, Édouard de Laboulaye. The two men recalled that the U.S. had won its independence in the first place with the aid of France, who had backed the rebel colonists largely as a “proxy war” with France’s great existential enemy of the time, Great Britain.
Bertholdi and Laboulaye decided the project should be a joint celebration by the French and American people of the American independence the French had done so much to bring about. While the project was delayed a decade by the collapse of the autocratic French government of Louis Napoléon — nephew of the original Napoleon, who had overthrown the second French Republic in 1852 and called himself “Napoleon III” — and its catastrophic loss of its own war with Germany in 1870, eventually the French government agreed to pay for the statue if the U.S. would donate the land for it — Bedloe’s Island, in the Verrazano Narrows at the entrance to New York City — and supply the pedestal on which to put the statue.
Burns’ documentary details how the statue was put together from a full-sized mold based on a quarter-sized scale model. The finished product was divided into 300 copper sheets for transportation across the Atlantic, Bertholdi had originally hoped to have the statue up in time for the American centennial celebration in Philadelphia in 1876, but all that was ready when that event rolled around was the right arm bearing its iconic torch. It proved harder to get the U.S. to fund the pedestal than it had to get France to finance the statue itself, and Burns’ film includes some snarky comments from American newspapers about the white elephant the French were trying to palm off on us.
When money to create the pedestal dried up in 1885, Joseph Pulitzer, Hungarian-born publisher of the New York World, took over the fundraising campaign. He made it a personal project and used his newspaper to encourage donations, no matter how small — essentially a Kickstarter campaign 130 years early. The pedestal was completed a year later and the statue was assembled from the parts shipped over from France. It was dedicated October 28, 1886 in a grand ceremony that featured then-President Grover Cleveland. Ironically, when Burns made his film in the early 1980’s the statue was surrounded by scaffolding that made it look like it was imprisoned — the result of a major renovation by the Reagan Administration that was still in progress when Burns was filming.

Opening — and Closing — the Golden Door

Originally the statue was supposed to be a celebration of liberty and the collaboration of America and France in bringing it to the New World. (The fact that representative forms of government had existed in America before its so-called “discovery” by European whites — notably the six-nation Iroquois Confederation — wasn’t mentioned.) That changed when poet Emma Lazarus was commissioned to write a sonnet that would appear as a plaque on the Statue’s pedestal. Contrasting the Statue of Liberty to similarly giant statues that had been built by the Roman Empire and other autocratic regimes of yore, Lazarus wrote a poem called “The New Colossus” which read:

Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
“Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!” cries she
With silent lips. “Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

Virtually none of her poem gets quoted today except for the last 4 ½ lines, but they remain controversial as well as inspiring. When those words were inscribed on the Statue of Liberty’s pedestal the U.S. had already begun to restrict immigration, passing the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 whose purpose was just what its title said: to stop all immigration from China to the U.S. for 20 years. (In 1902, when the 20 years were up, the ban was renewed and made indefinite.) According to history.com (https://www.history.com/topics/immigration/chinese-exclusion-act-1882), “Although the Chinese composed only .002 percent of the nation’s population, Congress passed the exclusion act to placate worker demands and assuage prevalent concerns about maintaining white ‘racial purity.’”
Immigration has remained a flash point ever since. In 1924 Congress passed broad limits on immigrants, essentially setting “quotas” limiting how many immigrants each country could send to us and, not surprisingly, admitting more white Europeans than people of color. In 1965, under a broad-based immigration reform sponsored by the late Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Massachusetts), the quotas were lifted and the laws against Chinese were finally repealed. But more recently aides to President Trump, including anti-immigration “hawk” Stephen Miller, have called for a return to the principles of the 1924 law and for so-called “merit-based” immigration, which would assess would-be immigrants based on how much they could potentially contribute to the American economy.

Still Fighting the Civil War

As with his later, longer and more famous films, Ken Burns studded The Statue of Liberty with prominent talking heads discussing the issues raised by the statue and the whole concept of “liberty” as it applies — or doesn’t — to the United States. Then-New York Governor Mario Cuomo appears in a fantasy interview with his mother, supposedly conducted as she arrived in New York as an emigrant from Italy, and the punch line was that she would say, “Some day my son is going to be Governor of New York.” (As things turned out, Signora Cuomo would have not only a son but a grandson as governor of New York: the current governor is Mario’s son Andrew.)
Perhaps the movie’s most powerful comments come from writers James Baldwin and Carolyn Forché. Baldwin says quite frankly that, as an African-American, he finds the lines of Thomas Jefferson, slaveowner, about all men being created equal to be insulting. In 2020 Baldwin’s icon-breaking attack on Jefferson seems ahead of its time, newly relevant in an era in which the culture wars are being re-fought and one of the flash points is over how, or even whether, to honor the founders of a republic that for all its loudly proclaimed ideals of freedom and liberty was based on a genocidal campaign against its Native population and the importation of Africans to be permanent slaves.
Statues have become key parts of the battleground over which the culture wars are being fought. Even before the police murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis on Memorial Day 2020, there were calls to remove the monuments honoring leaders of the Confederate rebellion. These statues of Confederate President Jefferson Davis, generals Robert E. Lee and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, and other so-called “heroes” of the Southern struggle to retain ownership of Black people as slaves were mostly put up between the 1890’s and the 1920’s.
Their real purpose was to intimidate Black Southerners with the totality of the Southern triumph. The U.S. Civil War was a classic example of one side winning the war but the other “winning the peace.” With dedication, fanaticism, a commitment to white supremacy, and liberal doses of outright terrorism, the slaveowners waited out the 1865-1877 “Reconstruction” period, reversed the business and political achievements of Southern Blacks and shoved them back into a level of political, economic and social subservience only a little better than being slaves. Those long walks filled with statues of Confederate “heroes” in cities like Richmond and Charlottesville were built by Southern whites to tell Southern Blacks, “We won. You lost. Accept it … or else.”
A June 2020 program on NBC News and MS-NBC, Stone Ghosts in the South, by Black journalists and filmmakers Trymaine Lee and John Eligon, shows the fraught history of Confederate monuments in the South; it’s available on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msIDM8MyGqg. Amazingly, Confederate monuments are still going up in the South; 1972 saw the official opening of the Stone Mountain project — enormous bas-relief statues of Davis, Lee and Jackson.
The Stone Mountain carvings had been planned in the late teens and had been commissioned by the Venable family, who owned the property, and the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC), who as the Lee-Eligon film shows were behind a lot of the Confederate monument projects. UDC charter member Mrs. C. Helen Plame headed the project and commissioned the first artist associated with it, sculptor Gutzon Borglum. She also tried to get Borglum to include a positive depiction of the Ku Klux Klan in the design. “I feel it is due to the Klan, which saved us from Negro dominations [sic] and carpetbag rule, that it be immortalized on Stone Mountain,” Plame wrote Borglum. “Why not represent a small group of them in their nightly uniform approaching in the distance?”
Borglum left the project over a financial dispute with the UDC and went on to create the monumental outdoor sculptures of former Presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt at Mount Rushmore, South Dakota. Meanwhile, the UDC and other pro-Confederate organizations continued to raise money and hire artists, until the monument was finally completed and unveiled in 1972. In 2015, then-NAACP president Richard Rose said that Stone Mountain was “the largest shrine to white supremacy in the history of the world ... I don’t think people understand the objective and the intent. They don’t understand that it’s based on white supremacy because the [American Civil War] was based on white supremacy, and the ‘heroes’ are based on white supremacy. After the killings at Emanuel Church in Charleston, it finally crystallized for me that these monuments encourage violence and validate oppression.”
And if you think 1972 is an awfully late date to unveil a new monument to the Confederacy in the Old South, how about 2000? That’s the date when a statue honoring Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest, one of the key founders of the Ku Klux Klan, went up in Selma, Alabama. In 1965 Selma gripped the nation when civil-rights volunteers led by the recently deceased U.S. Congressmember John Lewis (D-Georgia), assisted by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and members of his Southern Christian Leadership Conference, marched on Selma to demand equal voting rights for African-Americans. They were violently turned back by deputies led by racist sheriff Jim Clark, and Lewis was clubbed by a deputy and got a fractured skull.
This all happened on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, itself named after a former Confederate soldier and Klan leader. The official recorded tour guide to the Selma cemetery says, “In this old section of the cemetery, many notable citizens of Selma were laid to rest, such as General William Pardee, Senator Edmund Wilson Pettus, and Congressman Benjamin Stirling Thomas.” The appearance of a Forrest statue in Selma led to the predictable ruckus as Black Selmans denounced it as racist. The city took it down in 2012 — though they left the pedestal for it standing — but restored it in 2015.

The Legacies of Statues

Confederate war memorials and monuments aren’t the only arenas in which Americans are currently contesting the symbolism of statues as the way we tell our history and decide whom we should honor. President Donald Trump, who seems never to miss an opportunity to pick at the scab of American racism, has come out strongly for keeping up both the Confederate statues and the names of the 10 U.S. military bases — including Fort Bragg, Fort Benning and Fort Hood — which bizarrely honor generals who fought their most famous war against the United States military.
After the violent clashes over the statue of Robert E. Lee in Charlottesville, Virginia in 2017 — during which a pro-Confederate demonstrator ran down and killed an anti-racist activist and Trump said “there were very good people — on both sides” — Trump questioned whether the anti-racist activists who demanded tearing down the statues of Confederate leaders would stop there. Would they, he asked rhetorically, demand the destruction of statues honoring George Washington and Thomas Jefferson because they owned slaves?
For once, Trump was right. On June 14, protesters in Portland, Oregon tore down a statue of Jefferson. Four days later, a statue of Washington was also torn down. On July 19, activists in San Francisco destroyed a statue of Ulysses S. Grant, who ironically had led the U.S. military against the Confederacy in the Civil War. What’s more, during his eight years (1869-1877) of his Presidency, Grant also supervised Reconstruction and used the civil-rights laws passed by the Reconstruction Congresses to suppress the Ku Klux Klan.
According to Jonathan Turley, professor of public interest law at George Washington University and the one historical expert who testified for President Trump in impeachment proceedings (https://thehill.com/opinion/civil-rights/504033-the-destruction-of-statues-comes-with-more-attacks-on-free-speech), other unlikely targets for takedown or vandalism by supposedly anti-racist students and other activists include Abraham Lincoln; Admiral David Farragut, who fought for the Union in the Civil War; abolitionist leader Matthias Baldwin; and the 54th Massachusetts Infantry, the all-Black volunteer regiment who fought in the Civil War. (The film Glory, starring Denzel Washington as their leader and Matthew Broderick as Col. Robert Shaw, the white officer who commanded them, is about the 54th Infantry.)
But Turley isn’t the only writer who’s calling on protesters to be a little more judicious in whose statues they tear down or vandalize. Writers Tom Mackaman and Niles Niemuth of the World Socialist Web Site (https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2020/06/22/pers-j22.html) write that the destruction of memorials to the Confederacy is justified, “[b]ut the removal of monuments to the leaders of America’s revolutionary and civil wars has no justification. These men led great social struggles against the very forces of reaction that justified racial oppression as an incarnation of the fundamental inequality of human beings.”
And, I would add, if they themselves participated in an evil economic system based on racial oppression, that doesn’t move them from a “good” to a “bad” column of human character. It makes them human beings, flawed and not always able to live up to the best of their ideals. One of the odd things about how we write our history today — and, indeed, how we judge people we encounter in our ordinary lives — is a tendency, which I think is driven by the entertainment industry and how it divides the people it depicts into “heroes” and “villains,” to seize on the worst thing a person ever did and hold that as the standard by which their character should be judged for all time.
Many of the people whose statues are being attacked today have highly complex and ambiguous historical records. Through most of the 20th century, Andrew Jackson was considered a liberal hero because he worked to strike down property qualifications for voting. Before Jackson, you had to own land or some other tangible good to be allowed to vote — which led Benjamin Franklin to joke that if a man owned a donkey, and therefore could vote; and then the donkey died, so the man couldn’t vote, who held the franchise: the man or the donkey? After Jackson, just about every white male in the U.S. could vote.
Jackson was also hailed by liberal historians — including Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning 1946 biography The Age of Jackson — for taking on the Bank of the United States, symbol of the capitalist oligarchy of the time; and for standing up to pro-slavery secessionists like his first vice-president, John C. Calhoun, when they tried to tear the union apart over tariffs. But today most discourse around Jackson centers around the bad parts of his legacy, including his slaveownership and the genocidal policy of removing Native Americans, forcing the Cherokees out of the South on the infamous “Trail of Tears.”
Other highly contentious figures in American history whose statues are being torn down include Christopher Columbus, the so-called “discoverer of America,” and Father Junipero Serra, who during California’s days as part of the Spanish colony called “New Spain” (modern-day Mexico) built the mission system that helped unify the state — and did it with enslaved Native labor. The attacks on Columbus and Serra have often pitted historically disenfranchised groups against each other: Italian-Americans (who, like Irish-Americans, suffered over a century of racist discrimination and weren’t fully accepted as “white” until the 20th century) protest every time a statue of Columbus comes down and say it’s an attack on their contributions to the American saga.
Likewise, Serra biographer Stephen W. Hackel acknowledges in a Los Angeles Times op-ed (https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2020-07-19/junipero-serra-statue) that many of the criticisms of Serra are justified, but his removal from the historical record of America will paradoxically reinforce the standard racist narrative of America as a “white” nation with everyone else just along for the ride.
“Calls for Serra’s cancellation can reinforce outdated notions that the settlement of North America was a natural, pre-ordained, westward-moving Protestant tide, even though much of the continent from Florida to California was colonized by Spanish-speaking Catholics who came north from the Caribbean or what is now Mexico,” Hackel argued. “The cultures and religion of these pobladores and their descendants shape our land in lasting ways. Monuments to Serra have served as useful — if flawed and insensitive — markers for Hispanic contributions to a diverse national fabric.”
As for those faces on Mount Rushmore, not only have Washington and Jefferson been reflexively denounced as slaveowners (as if they did nothing else of any importance at all), Theodore Roosevelt has got criticism from both sides in the culture war. Progressive activists got a statue of him removed in New York because it posed him with a Black boy on one side and a Native boy on the other, essentially presenting him as a “Great White Father” to hapless racial inferiors. Right-wingers, who point to Roosevelt’s attacks on corporate trusts, his protection of the environment, and his call (after he left the Republican Party and sought a third term independently in 1912) for universal health insurance, have said he wasn’t a “real” Republican and called for him to be sand-blasted off Mount Rushmore and replaced by Ronald Reagan.
Even the Statue of Liberty hasn’t been immune from the culture wars. A number of anti-immigrant activists have called for the removal of Emma Lazarus’s poem from its pedestal on the ground that the appeal to immigrants is out of date and the U.S. can no longer afford to welcome “your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.” It’s just another example of how the United States is not immune to the battles we’ve seen in other countries over who gets to define the national heritage and for what purposes.
Public statues and monuments are symbols of what we value, but when they also represent real people they can get caught up in historical arguments over who those people were, what they accomplished and whether their net effect on the world was for good or ill. Maybe the real genius of Frédéric Auguste Bertholdi was to make his statue a mythical “Miss Liberty” rather than a real person — male or female — whose legacy we could fight over in what seem to be our interminable culture wars.

Wednesday, July 01, 2020

Trump’s Gleichschaltung Kills People, Destroys Justice and Democracy

by MARK GABRISH CONLAN

Copyright © 2020 by Mark Gabrish Conlan for Zenger’s Newsmagazine • All rights reserved

Throughout Donald Trump’s Presidency, he has demanded one thing and one thing only from his appointees, from the most prestigious Cabinet positions to the lowliest drones on the White House staff. He calls it “loyalty,” and by that he means not loyalty to the United States Constitution, the principle of representative democracy, the pursuit of justice or even the most basic competence in their jobs. He means “loyalty” to the person of Donald Trump. Appointees in Trump’s administration are expected to serve Trump, not the country. As long as they do what Trump wants and make him look good, he loves them. Once they step off the reservation, he not only fires them but publicly insults them and does whatever he can to destroy their chances at a subsequent career.
Adolf Hitler had a name for this: Gleichschaltung. Like Trump, Hitler was determined to rid his government of its infrastructure of nonpartisan civil servants and replace them with fanatical, dedicated Nazis who would be loyal, not to the German Constitution or the German people as a whole, but personally to him.
Gleichschaltung is one of those indigestible compound words the Germans like to pull together from bits and pieces of their language. It doesn’t have an easy English translation — though I’ve seen it rendered as “coordination” or “rectification” — but Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Gleichschaltung) gives the following definition:

[T]he act, process, or policy of achieving rigid and total coordination and uniformity (as in politics, culture, communication) by forcibly repressing or eliminating independence and freedom of thought, action, or expression: forced reduction to a common level: forced standardization or assimilation.

Trump’s latest act of Gleichschaltung occurred on Saturday, June 20, when at the request of Attorney General William Barr he fired the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Geoffrey Berman. Berman had first learned the administration wanted him out the day before, when Barr’s office had issued a press release stating that Berman would be resigning and Jay Clayton, Trump’s appointee to head the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), would be taking his place as U.S. Attorney. According to one report, the initial motivation was simply that Clayton —a long-time friend of Trump who had supported him in the 2016 campaign — was tired of living and working in Washington, D.C. and wanted a job that would return him to New York.
If Trump and Barr thought Berman would meekly accept his dismissal and go gently into that good night filled with appointees Trump has got rid of for specious reasons and in devious ways, they had another think coming. “I have not resigned, and have no intention of resigning, my position, to which I was appointed by the Judges of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York,” Berman said in a statement. “I will step down when a presidentially appointed nominee is confirmed by the Senate. Until then, our investigations will move forward without delay or interruption. I cherish every day that I work with the men and women of this Office to pursue justice without fear or favor — and intend to ensure that this Office’s important cases continue unimpeded.”
Ironically, when Berman was first appointed in early 2018, there were concerns raised that he was too close to Trump. He had worked on Trump’s transition team and had personally been interviewed by Trump for the job — a breach of the usual protocol that the Attorney General interviews U.S. Attorney candidates and the President merely says yea or nay on their appointments. He had also been a law partner of Trump’s personal attorney, Rudolph Giuliani (a former Mayor of New York who had, ironically, once himself been the U.S Attorney for the Southern District of New York) at the firm of Greenberg, Traurig, LLP, though they had never actually tried a case together.
But if Trump thought he would be getting a complaisant U.S. Attorney who would treat him and his friends with kid gloves, he was sorely disappointed. Under Berman, the Southern District — which, because its jurisdiction includes Manhattan, has authority over virtually all of Trump’s business dealings — investigated and won a guilty plea from Trump’s former attorney, Michael Cohen. Though Berman didn’t participate in that case, his office not only got Cohen to plead guilty to eight felonies, his plea stated that he committed at least two of the crimes because his then-boss, Donald Trump, ordered him to.
Berman’s office also investigated whether Donald Trump’s main business, the Trump Organization, violated campaign finance laws. And he launched an investigation of his former law partner, Rudolph Giuliani, on charges that he and two associates, Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman, had broken U.S. laws by attempting to get the government of Ukraine to dig up damaging information on Democratic Presidential candidate Joe Biden. He also investigated the U.S. operations of Halkbank, a Turkish bank with ties to Turkey’s authoritarian President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a favorite of Trump’s.
In March 2020 Berman said publicly, “The Southern District of New York has a long history of integrity and pursuing cases, and declining to pursue cases, based only on the facts and the law and the equities, without regard to partisan political concerns.” That, one might think, is what a U.S. attorney is supposed to do. But it’s not what Trump thinks a U.S. attorney is supposed to do. In a remarkable interview with Right-wing talk radio host Larry O’Connor on WMAL-FM November 2, 2017 Trump said:

[T]he saddest thing is, because I’m the President of the United States, I am not supposed to be involved with the Justice Department. I’m not supposed to be involved with the FBI. I’m not supposed to be doing the kinds of things I would love to be doing. And I am very frustrated by it. … [A]s a President, you are not supposed to be involved in that process. But hopefully they are doing something, and at some point maybe we’re going to all have it out.

Trump made clear to O’Connor just what he would “love” to be able to order the Justice Department and the FBI to investigate, including the funding of Christopher Steele’s dossier on the connections between Trump and Russia (which he falsely claimed was the origin of Robert Mueller’s two-year investigation of Russian influence on Trump’s behalf in the 2016 Presidential campaign); Hillary Clinton’s e-mails; and the leaks from his own administration. It’s clear that Trump believes the Justice Department should be his personal instrument of vengeance against his perceived political enemies —including Barack Obama and Joe Biden, whom he’s recently accused of “crimes” without giving any specifics about what crimes he’s accusing them of.
And in Bill Barr, he now has an attorney general who for the most part will go along, investigate whomever Trump wants investigated and clear whomever Trump wants cleared — including Trump’s first national security adviser, General Michael Flynn, whom Barr recently dismissed Mueller’s case against even though Flynn had twice pleased guilty to lying to the FBI. On June 20, Barr quickly quashed Geoffrey Berman’s brief rebellion, announcing that he had asked Trump to fire Berman and Trump had done so. Berman agreed to leave the office once Barr assured him that instead of Jay Clayton, his interim replacement would be his deputy, Audrey Strauss, whom Berman apparently trusted to maintain the integrity of his investigations against Trump’s associates.
A June 20 report in the New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/20/nyregion/trump-geoffrey-berman-fired-sdny.html?auth=login-email&login=email), which was so extensive no fewer than seven people were on the byline — Alan Feuer, Katie Benner, Ben Protess, Maggie Haberman, William K. Rashbaum, Nicole Hong and Benjamin Weiser — noted that, “Throughout the day on Saturday, many current and former employees of the Southern District marveled at just how sour relations with their colleagues in Washington had gotten. Some worried openly that the move threatened the independence of federal prosecutors.”
The Times team quoted David Massey, who’s now a defense attorney but served as a prosecutor with the Southern District of New York for over a decade, as saying, “While there have always been turf battles between the Southern District and the Justice Department in Washington, and occasionally sharp elbows, to take someone out suddenly while they’re investigating the president’s lawyer, it is just unprecedented in modern times.”

Voice of America or Voice of Trump?

Three days before Geoffrey Berman left his job as U.S. Attorney for the Southern Disrict of New York, an aggressive appointee of President Trump carried out a Trump Gleichschaltung at the Voice of America (VOA) and its parent agency, the U.S. Agency for Global Media. The appointee was Michael Pack, Right-wing filmmaker and protégé of former Trump campaign manager and strategic adviser Steve Bannon.
Pack took office June 4 after a contentious confirmation hearing before the U.S. Senate and a party-line 53-38 vote to approve him, and he immediately fired Ray Fang, head of Radio Free Asia, and Alberto Fernandez, head of the Middle East Information Network. He also fired the agency’s entire board of directors and announced he would appoint a new board. Voice of America director Amanda Bennett and her deputy, Sandy Sugawara, both resigned in protest.
The Voice of America was founded in 1942 as part of the U.S. war effort. Its initial mission was to counteract Nazi propaganda being broadcast to neutral countries. After World War II ended and the Cold War began, its mission evolved to counter propaganda from the Soviet Union and other Eastern Bloc countries, and to promote representative democracy and free-market capitalism as superior alternatives to Communism. But VOA has long been caught up in an ongoing battle over how best to promote the United States: should it broadcast programming reflecting the views of the United States government and whoever is currently running it; or should it promote the idea of a free press by serving as an example of one, beholden only to accuracy, fairness, independence and other journalistic standards?
The current law, as summarized on the Voice of America Web site, “prohibits interference by any U.S. government official in the objective, independent reporting of news, thereby safeguarding the ability of our journalists to develop content that reflects the highest professional standards of journalism, free of political interference,”
Right-wingers in the U.S. government have been dumping on the Voice of America at least since 1953, when the notorious Red-baiting Senator Joe McCarthy (R-Wisconsin) sent two of his staff members to Europe to investigate it. One of the investigators was Roy Cohn, who later became a New York attorney and fixer until he was disbarred for ethics violations in 1986 and died of complications from AIDS a year later. One of Roy Cohn’s principal clients was Donald Trump; Cohn masterminded Trump’s rise from small-time real-estate developer in New York’s outer boroughs to major player in Manhattan, and he made such an impression on Trump that quite often, faced with legal troubles, he will yell at his current attorneys and say, “Where’s my Roy Cohn?”
The Voice of America again attracted scrutiny from Right-wing Congressmembers in 2014. That year, according to a New Republic report quoted in a recent post on Vox.com (https://www.vox.com/2020/6/18/21295549/trump-bannon-pack-global-media-china-wednesday-massacre), “In 2014, Rep. Ed Royce, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, introduced legislation that would turn the agency into an explicit instrument of American ‘public diplomacy,’ with a mandate to promote U.S. foreign policy.”
According to Vox.com reporter Alex Ward, Right-wing attacks on Voice of America ramped up once Trump declared his candidacy for President. A group called “BBG Watch” (“BBG” stood for “Broadcasting Board of Governors,” then the name of the board running the U.S. Agency for Global Media) “highlighted news reports in which the agency compared Trump to Lenin and Mao, criticized his immigration policies, and poked fun at his speeches,” the New Republic reported in 2017.
Once Trump won the election, Ward explained, “Republicans in Congress changed the governance structure of VOA, replacing the bipartisan executive board with a CEO appointed by the president. And two young members of the administration in January 2017 were sent over to the news organization to monitor its operations. ‘The priority is to make coverage fall in line with the president’s world view,’ said Brett Bruen, the director for global engagement on President Barack Obama’s National Security Council, who had these U.S.-funded media outlets in his portfolio.”
According to Ward, the main complaint Trump, Congressional Republicans and Right-wing media activists have against VOA is it’s been too soft on China. (This is also the stated reason Trump gave for pulling U.S. support from the World Health Organization —first “temporarily,” then permanently — in the middle of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.) “Journalists should report the facts, but VOA has instead amplified Beijing’s propaganda,” read an April 2020 White House article titled “Amid a Pandemic, Voice of America Spends Your Money to Promote Foreign Propaganda.”
“This week, VOA called China’s Wuhan lockdown a successful ‘model’ copied by much of the world — and then tweeted out video of the Communist government’s celebratory light show marking the quarantine’s alleged end,” the article continued. Iromically, VOA did not create that news story — the Associated Press did — but Trump nonetheless cited it in defense of Pack’s purge: “What things they say are disgusting toward our country. And Michael Pack would get in and do a great job.”
Senator Robert Menendez (D-New Jersey), the ranking Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, said, “As feared, Michael Pack has confirmed he is on a political mission to destroy the [agency’s] independence and undermine its historic role. The wholesale firing of the Agency’s network heads, and disbanding of corporate boards to install President Trump’s political allies is an egregious breach of this organization’s history and mission from which it may never recover.”
“[Pack] has taken a rocket-propelled grenade and started shooting it off at various parts of the organizational chart,” said Bruen, and he’s turning into “something much more similar to the North Korean Ministry of Information.” Any perceived campaign to disseminate Trump’s world view “will stink up the place,” he continued, “and that stench is going to spread to anything that carries the label of a U.S. international media agency.”
Though acknowledging that VOA and its sister networks need improvement — especially since countries like Russia and China are making their international media outreach agencies more efficient — Bruen added that VOA and the other U.S. Agencyfor Global Media Networks have for almost 80 years been able “to develop an audience and credible independent voice so people would listen to the information that the U.S. wanted to share.”
But it’s clear that Trump, Bannon and Pack don’t think an independent news source with the U.S. government imprimatur is a good thing. Prominent Trump critic Walter Shaub, who was pushed out of his former position as director of government ethics in yet another example of Trump’s Gleichschaltung, called Pack’s purge “the Breitbartization of U.S. government media” — a reference to Breitbart News, the far-Right Web site Bannon used to run before he joined Trump’s campaign and returned to when Trump fired him in August 2017 — only to be fired at the behest of Breitbart’s financial sponsors in January 2018.
And it’s ironic, to say the least, that the issue on which Trump and his cronies have savaged the Voice of America is its alleged “softness” on China, when former National Security Advisor John Bolton revealed in his book The Room Where It Happened that Trump sucked up to Chinese President Xi Jinping at an international meeting in Osaka, Japan in summer 2019 to get him to buy more soybeans from American farmers to help Trump’s re-election chances in the farm states.
Though Bolton was prevented by White House censors from putting Trump’s exact words in the book on the ground that they were “classified,” Gabriel Sherman of Vanity Fair got a look at an unredacted copy of the manuscript (https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2020/06/boltons-unredacted-book-shows-trump-trying-to-hide). He reported that Trump told Xi, “Buy a lot of soybeans and wheat and make sure we win.”

Trump’s War on Inspectors General

President Trump began his jihad against the federal government’s inspectors general on April 3, when he fired Michael Atkinson, the intelligence community’s inspector general (https://www.politico.com/news/2020/04/03/trump-fires-intelligence-community-inspector-general-164287). Inspectors general (that’s the correct plural, by the way) are supposed to be independent of the agencies to which they’re assigned. Their purpose is to keep an eye on federal agencies and report wrongdoing by the executive branch to Congress. One of the ways they do that is by receiving complaints from agency whistleblowers, deciding whether the whistleblowers’ allegations are serious and credible, and if they are, transmitting them to Congress.
Atkinson did just that in September 2019, passing along a report by a whistleblower who alleged he’d heard of a phone call between President Trump and Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelensky in which Trump told Zelensky, “I would like you to do me a favor, though,” before Trump would release military aid money Congress had approved for Ukraine’s self-defense against Russian aggression.
It was actually two favors: Trump wanted Ukraine’s justice department to investigate former vice-president Joe Biden, Trump’s likely re-election opponent in November, and his son Hunter over Hunter’s service on the board of a Ukrainian energy company. He also wanted Ukraine to turn over Hillary Clinton’s e-mail server — even though the allegation that Ukraine had the server at all was a bit of Right-wing conspiracy-mongering.
Since the whistleblower’s complaint and Atkinson’s forwarding it to Congress led to Trump’s impeachment in the House of Representatives and trial in the Senate — both times on virtually party-line votes — Trump evidently wanted payback against Atkinson even though Trump himself had appointed him in November 2017. Trump fired Atkinson on a Friday night and said, “As is the case with regard to other positions where I, as president, have the power of appointment, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, it is vital that I have the fullest confidence in the appointees serving as inspectors general. That is no longer the case with regard to this inspector general.” Later he said Atkinson “took a fake report and gave it to Congress.”
Since then Trump has fired at least three other inspectors general (https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/16/politics/list-inspector-general-removed-trump/index.html). On April 10 he removed acting Defense Department inspector general Glenn Fine from his job, which among other things would have given him authority to oversee the spending of the $10 trillion Congress had just approved in emergency relief funding in response to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Trump actually demoted Fine rather than firing him, but within a month Fine chose to resign completely rather than accept a lesser assignment.
On May 2, Trump announced he would be firing Christi Grimm, acting inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services, after she signed a report that said America’s doctors and other health care workers can’t get enough SARS-CoV-2 tests and personal protective equipment to do their jobs properly. Trump had denounced the report as “wrong” on April 6 and claimed Grimm was an appointee of former President Barack Obama, though she’d previously served in government under both Republican and Democratic administrations.
Then Trump fired Steve Linick, the State Department’s inspector general, on May 13 at the urging of Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Linick had been investigating a number of allegations against Pompeo. Among these were that he was using members of both the State Department staff and his personal security detail to run private errands for himself and his wife. He was also accused of hosting private so-called “Madison Dinners” inside the State Department building for prospective donors, fundraisers and supporters for Pompeo’s future political ambitions, including a possible U.S. Senate run from his native Kansas.
But the most serious allegation that Linick was investigating was that Pompeo had abused the power of the Secretary of State to make an “emergency declaration” that allowed the U.S. to sell arms to the government of Saudi Arabia. Thanks to Pompeo’s “emergency declaration,” the sale went through despite opposition from members of Congress, including some Republicans, who were worried that Saudi Arabia would give the arms to the government of Yemen to commit war crimes against civilians in their Saudi-backed war against the Houthi, a rebel group seeking to overthrow the Yemeni government.
Trump’s letter firing Linick was strikingly similar to the one he’d written against Atkinson, saying he “no longer” had the “fullest confidence” in him. Reportedly Pompeo asked Trump to fire Linick, and Trump had only one question for Pompeo about Linick: “Who appointed him?” Once Pompeo said Linick had been an Obama appointee, Trump agreed to let him go and replace him with proven Trump loyalist Stephen Akard, an ally of Vice-President Mike Pence.

Trump’s Gleichschaltung Threatens Lives!

But President Trump’s determination to rid the government of people he doesn’t consider sufficiently “loyal” to him personally isn’t just interfering with the ability of the American people and their elected representatives in Congress to keep tabs on Cabinet departments and hold them, their secretaries and the President accountable. In the current pandemic of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and COVID-19, the disease it causes, the President’s determination to rid the government of the allegedly “disloyal” directly threatens the lives of Americans and others throughout the world.
On May 10, the long-running CBS-TV news program 60 Minutes reported on the decision of the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) to cancel a $3.7 million five-year grant to EcoHealth Alliance, a New York-based group of viral researchers who work with similar organizations in other countries to study both ongoing and potential viral pandemics (https://www.cbsnews.com/news/nih-cancelled-coronavirus-research-grant-60-minutes-2020-05-10/). Among the organizations EcoHealth Alliance and its director, Dr. Peter Daszak, were working with was the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan, China. Wuhan is generally believed to be where SARS-CoV-2 evolved and became a health threat that eventually affected the whole world.
Though back in January Trump was publicly praising China and its authoritarian president, Xi Jiaoping, for having acted early and got a good start protecting its people and the rest of the world against SARS-CoV-2, the White House “line” abruptly changed in mid-March. Then Trump joined a lot of Right-wing media commentators, including Sean Hannity of Fox News, who believed that the Wuhan Institute of Virology had either been studying the new virus in their labs and had accidentally released it into the population; or, worse, had deliberately developed SARS-CoV-2 and let it loose around the world as a bioweapon.
Hannity publicly questioned on his Fox News program why the U.S. government was giving money to the Wuhan Institute of Virology (which it wasn’t) and called on the Trump administration to pull the grant. The NIH accordingly canceled the funding just a year after having renewed it and given it one of their highest recommendations. Though the NIH refused to comment to 60 Minutes on why they’d pulled EcoHealth Alliance’s grant, Dr. Daszak was scathing about the potential consequences.
“It matters because number one, our work is used in developing vaccines and drugs to save American lives and the lives of people around the world. So that matters a lot,” Daszak told 60 Minutes reporter Scott Pelley. “Number two, if we really want to know where viruses are going to emerge and cause the next pandemic, we need to have scientific collaborations like this. They’re our only eyes and ears on the ground in countries that are very difficult, for political reasons, to work in.”
On May 17, a week after breaking the story about the NIH defunding Dr. Peter Daszak’s international viral research program, 60 Minutes presented an even more devastating story about the Trump administration firing a scientist because he refused to toe the administration’s line on SARS-CoV-2. This time the victim was Dr. Rick Bright, who until April 2020 was the head of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Agency (BARDA). Asked by interviewer Norah O’Donnell, who also anchors the CBS Evening News, what BARDA does, Dr. Bright said, “We focus on chemical threats, biological threats such as anthrax, nuclear threats, radiological threats, pandemic influenza, and emerging infectious diseases.”
Having studied virology his entire life — he has a Ph.D. in virology — Dr. Bright recognized early in January 2020 that SARS-CoV-2 had the potential to cause a pandemic. It was, he said, “[a]n unknown virus infecting people, causing significant mortality, and spreading. … It was just a matter of time before that virus then jumped and left China, and appeared in other countries.” He thought his colleagues at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) shared his sense of urgency — but was astonished that officials at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which oversees NIH, did not.
Dr. Bright recalled a January 23 meeting chaired by Secretary Alex Azar, the head of HHS, at which “I was the only person in the room … that said, ‘We’re going to need vaccines and diagnostics and drugs. It’s going to take a while, but we need to get started.’” Instead, Secretary Azar seemed to be intent on minimizing the potential for a SARS-CoV-2 pandemic — and so did President Trump, who spoke in Wisconsin January 30, at a time when there were only five COVID-19 cases in the U.S. and ridiculed the whole idea that it could be a serious threat.
Ironically, Dr. Bright said, just five months before the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak a working group from BARDA and other federal public health agencies had conducted a study called “Crimson Contagion” about what might happen if a pandemic occurred. “There were lessons about shortages of critical supplies such as personal protective equipment; such as masks, N95 masks, gowns, goggles. And there were lessons about the need for funding,” Dr. Bright told O’Donnell. “We had practiced. We’d drilled. We’d been through Ebola. We’d been through Zika. We’d been through H1N1. This was not a new thing for us. We knew exactly what to do.”
Unfortunately, they didn’t get the chance to do it. On January 25, Dr. Bright sent a memo to his superiors warning that the entire U.S. health-care community would face a “severe shortage of masks when the pandemic hit. Dr. Bright said they responded “passively.” Though Dr. Bright had lined up a U.S. company that could have turned out masks immediately, his superiors decided to wait for two months before they ordered them — and they went to a firm in China to buy them. An incredulous O’Donnell asked Dr. Bright if we’ve completely offshored our ability to respond to a pandemic. Dr. Bright said, “We have offshored a lot of our industry for critical supplies, critical health-care supplies, and critical medicines, to save money.”
But the issue that finally cost Dr. Bright his job — and cost Americans the benefits of his expertise in researching viruses and developing vaccines and treatments against them — was hydroxychloroquine. This is a well-known drug documented as effective in treating malaria and lupus, but it’s been touted as a treatment for COVID-19 even though, as the New England Journal of Medicine reported on June 20 (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2012410), there is no “robust evidence supporting its use” for this disease. Other studies have warned of potential side effects, including the risk that it could cause heart attacks. “[T]he limited data available told us that it could be dangerous,” Dr. Bright told O’Donnell. “It could have negative side effects, and it could even lead to death.”
On April 20 the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a warning that hydroxychloroquine should be used as a COVID-19 treatment only in a hospital setting, and nearly two months later, on June 15 the FDA withdrew its emergency approval of hydroxychloroquine as a COVID-19 treatment. Nonetheless, President Trump not only pushed hydroxychloroquine and a related drug, chloroquine, as “potential game-cbangers” in the fight against the pandemic, he went on the drug himself for a week and a half even though he said his SARS-CoV-2 tests were negative and he showed no symptoms.
On April 21 Dr. Bright was fired as head of BARDA and given a demotion to a lesser job in HHS. “I believe my last-ditch effort to protect Americans from that drug was the final straw. That they used and believed was essential to push me out,” he told O’Donnell on 60 Minutes. Secretary Azar claimed that, far from opposing hydroxychloroquine, Dr. Bright had actually signed the letter asking the FDA for emergency authorization to use it. Dr. Bright told O’Donnell that that was technically true, but “I was given a directive. I didn’t have a choice, other than to leave at that time. And I went along and signed that letter, knowing that we had contained access to that drug” by confining the FDA’s approval to hospitalized patients only.
Dr. Bright filed an extensively documented whistleblower complaint over his demotion that ran over 300 pages. His public statements and the whistleblower complaint prompted an all too typical and predictable spew of insults from President Trump at a May 13 press conference: “Honestly, it seems to me — I watched this guy for a little while this morning. To me he’s nothing more than a really disgruntled, unhappy person.”
“I am not disgruntled,” Dr. Bright told O’Donnell. “I am frustrated at the lack of leadership. I am frustrated at the lack of urgency to get a head start on developing life-saving tools for Americans. I am frustrated at our inability to be heard as scientists. Those things frustrate me.” (View the full interview with Dr. Rick Bright at https://www.cbsnews.com/news/rick-bright-whistleblower-trump-administration-coronavirus-pandemic-response/.)

Gleichschaltung Throughout Trump’s Presidency

Throughout his Presidency — indeed, throughout his entire life — Donald Trump has shown an utter intolerance for other people’s points of view and an insistence on “total coordination and uniformity” within his organization. He made that clear during the first week he was in office, when he signed a succession of sweeping, far-reaching “executive orders” — directives to the entire federal government which push the limits of the Constitutional powers of the Presidency — which made him look less like a constitutionally elected leader than a South American general who had just taken power in a coup d’état.
He made that clear again when he met then-FBI director James Comey for dinner on January 27, 2017 — just one week into his Presidency — and, according to Comey’s later testimony before Congress (https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/06/james-comeys-opening-statement-on-trump-annotated/529521/), Trump twice asked him to declare his “loyalty” — not to the Constitution or the fair enforcement of federal law, but to Donald Trump personally. Comey described the interactions this way in his opening statement to his Congressional testimony:

[The President] said, “I need loyalty, I expect loyalty.” I didn’t move, speak, or change my facial expression in any way during the awkward silence that followed. We simply looked at each other in silence. The conversation then moved on, but he returned to the subject near the end of our dinner.

At one point, I explained why it was so important that the FBI and the Department of Justice be independent of the White House. I said it was a paradox: Throughout history, some Presidents have decided that because “problems” come from Justice, they should try to hold the Department close. But blurring those boundaries ultimately makes the problems worse by undermining public trust in the institutions and their work.

Near the end of our dinner, the President returned to the subject of my job, saying he was very glad I wanted to stay, adding that he had heard great things about me from Jim Mattis, Jeff Sessions, and many others. He then said, “I need loyalty.” I replied, “You will always get honesty from me.” He paused and then said, “That’s what I want, honest loyalty.” I paused, and then said, “You will get that from me.” As I wrote in the memo I created immediately after the dinner, it is possible we understood the phrase “honest loyalty” differently, but I decided it wouldn’t be productive to push it further. The term – honest loyalty – had helped end a very awkward conversation and my explanations had made clear what he should expect.

It obviously wasn’t what Trump expected — or wanted — because he fired Comey three months later and has continued a steady stream of denunciations of both him and his second-in-command, Andrew McCabe. In these pages, I noted that during World War II the American servicemembers who fought had sworn an oath to protect and defend the U.S. Constitution. The German, Italian and Japanese soldiers they fought against had sworn an oath not to a constitution or to the nation as a whole, but to a single person: Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini or Emperor Hirohito, respectively. Indeed, Nazi Germany defined “the will of the Führer” as its ultimate legal authority.
Trump’s firing of Comey, and the conversation between them that led up to it, indicated that Trump had no desire to be a constitutionally elected leader with limited powers. He wanted to be a dictator, a Führer, and he wanted the people on his staff and throughout the federal government to swear the Führer oath to him. And during the three years of his Presidency, he has consistently and relentlessly purged anyone from the government who refused to take the oath of “loyalty” to the person of Donald Trump.
Whatever Gleichschaltung meant in theory, in practice it meant the systematic purge of independent-minded people from any positions of authority in the government of Germany so Hitler could replace them with dedicated, fanatical Nazis. Indeed, Hitler took it so far that even his Minister of Propaganda, Joseph Goebbels, wrote in his diaries about his futile arguments with Hitler over whether the principal qualification for jobs in the Nazi government should be a “low party number” — i.e., someone who’d joined the Nazis early, well before they took power — or actual ability to do the jobs.
Trump couldn’t care less about the actual ability of his appointees to do the jobs to which he’s appointed them. Nor does he care about their honesty. Despite all the promises to “drain the swamp” of corrupt officials only in government service for their personal gain, he’s appointed plenty of people like that to his Cabinet and other high offices. (Indeed, since he seems to regard the Presidency as largely a source of income for himself, he doesn’t seem to mind if his appointees cut themselves in on a bit of the graft, too.) All that matters is their personal loyalty to Donald Trump. Trump demands only two things from his appointees: “make me look good” and “make me richer.”
The two men Comey mentioned in his Congressional testimony as having said “great things about me” to Trump — former Defense Secretary James Mattis and former Attorney General Jeff Sessions — are both now on Trump’s scrap heap. Indeed, Trump fired Sessions right after the 2018 midterm election, in which he kept Republican control of the U.S. Senate but lost the House of Representatives to the Democrats, and ultimately replaced him with William Barr, who has essentially taken the Führer oath and turned the Department of Justice into Trump’s legal handmaiden.
On the actual issues, Jeff Sessions was as Right-wing as Right-wing could be. He eagerly contributed to Trump’s jihad against immigrants (and also contributed his nativist staff member, Stephen Miller, to Trump’s White House staff). He denounced state laws allowing marijuana use and pledged to use the federal government to crack down on them. He joined in the Republicans’ assault on the ability of people to vote — especially young people, poor people, people of color and others not likely to vote Republican.
But he was also enough of an institutionalist to resist the pressure from Donald Trump to turn the Justice Department into Trump’s personal fiefdom. Like Comey, Sessions believed it was “important that the FBI and the Department of Justice be independent of the White House.” When he found that the FBI was already investigating allegations that the government of Russia, particularly its intelligence services, had intervened in the 2016 U.S. election to help Trump and hurt Hillary Clinton, Sessions recused himself from supervising the investigation on the ground that as a key member of Trump’s campaign (and the first U.S. Senator to endorse him), he had an inherent conflict of interest. Trump never forgave him, and constantly ragged on Sessions in tweets, speeches and interviews until he finally pushed Sessions out the door after nearly two years.
Trump’s current Attorney General, William Barr, has been everything Trump could have wished for — and did wish for in his WMAL-FM radio interview with Larry O’Connor on November 2, 2017. Under Barr’s leadership, the Justice Department has sought a reduced sentence for former Trump campaign associate Roger Stone, convicted on eight counts including repeatedly lying to Congress and intimidating a witness. One of the prosecutors in the Stone case, Aaron Zelinsky, stepped down from it over the recommendation and testified to the House Judiciary Committee June 25 that he and his fellow prosecutors were pressured to give Stone “a break” — and the pressure came from the White House. (https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/23/prosecutor-says-he-was-pressured-to-cut-roger-stone-a-break-because-of-his-ties-to-trump-336075)
Barr also ordered prosecutors to drop the pending case against Michael Flynn, former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and Trump’s national security advisor for the first three weeks of his Presidency. Flynn had twice pleaded guilty of lying to the FBI in 2016 about his lobbying contacts with Russia and Turkey, and it’s highly unusual for the Justice Department to drop a case in which they’ve already won a conviction.
“Mr. Barr’s move was widely seen as extraordinary and a break with the Justice Department’s approach in cases not involving a presidential favorite, fueling accusations of politicization,” New York Times reporter Charlie Savage wrote June 24 (https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/24/us/politics/michael-flynn-appeals-court.html). “In particular, legal experts broadly disputed his notion that the false statements were immaterial, since they bore on the broader counterintelligence investigation into whether Trump campaign officials had coordinated with Russia’s 2016 election interference.
The judge in the case, Emmet T. Sullivan, balked at the dismissal and appointed a so-called “special master” — a retired fellow judge — to argue the case that Flynn’s guilty plea should stand. But on June 23 a sharply divided three-judge panel of the Washington, D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals issued a 2-1 decision ordering Sullivan to drop the Flynn prosecution. “The order from the panel — a so-called writ of mandamus — was rare and came as a surprise, taking its place as yet another twist in the extraordinary legal and political drama surrounding the prosecution of Mr. Flynn,” Times reporter Savage wrote.
In addition to protecting Trump friends and associates like Michael Flynn and Roger Stone, William Barr has used his position as Attorney General to go after Trump’s enemies, real or perceived. In late May Trump signed an extraordinary executive order targeting Twitter and social media companies, just two days after Twitter red-flagged two Trump tweets about the alleged potential for fraud in mail voting and Trump accused the platform, which he has used extensively, of trying to censor him.
“Trump’s order aims to limit the companies’ legal immunity for how they moderate content posted by users, a goal that legal experts said exceeds the president’s authority unless he persuades Congress to change the law,” wrote Los Angeles Times reporter Chris Megerian in a May 28 article (https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2020-05-28/trump-expected-to-sign-order-on-social-media). “But the move could increase political and financial pressure on Twitter, Facebook, Google and other Silicon Valley giants by opening the door to lawsuits and regulatory reviews.”
A month later, on June 25, Los Angeles Times columnist Harry Litman reported on an even more far-reaching assault on social media companies by Attorney General Barr (https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2020-06-25/willima-barr-vote-by-mail-antitrust-google-department-of-justice). “Picking up on Trump’s bitter but unsubstantiated criticism of Facebook, Twitter and other internet companies, Barr is determined to rattle the DOJ’s antitrust saber at Silicon Valley, and first up is the advertising and search giant Google,” Litman wrote. “According to various news reports, the department is already drafting an antitrust complaint against Google and interviewing lawyers to prosecute the case. That’s after only a year of investigation, which is actually warp speed in terms of bringing an antitrust complaint.”
While progressives and leftists have called on the federal government to investigate the social-media giants both for their economic power and their potential political influence, Barr’s attack on Google and threats to other companies like Facebook and Twitter is, among other things, a threat to force them to highlight more Right-wing voices and be more sympathetic to Trump. In a Fox News interview, Barr quoted Right-wing Congressmember and fanatical Trump supporter Devin Nunes (R-California) as saying the big social-media platforms censored conservatives, and added, “One way that this can be addressed,” Barr went on, “is through the antitrust laws and challenging companies that engage in monopolistic practices.”
Barr also attacked voting by mail in the same Fox interview in which he threatened antitrust prosecution against Google. Echoing Trump, who has attacked voting by mail as inherently fraudulent even though Trump votes by mail himself, Barr said that mail voting “absolutely opens the floodgates to fraud. Those things are delivered into mailboxes. They can be taken out. There’s questions about whether or not it even denies a secret ballot.”
“Barr has shown himself willing to use his vast powers in the service of the president’s political interests,” Litman wrote. “So when he lays out an election-year agenda that plainly coincides with Republican Party interests, we should take him at his word: The DOJ is gearing up for a battle on behalf of Trump. The conduct will be dressed up in law enforcement garb, but the attorney general is being nakedly partisan.”
Trump’s attitude towards law enforcement, his demands of a complaisant Attorney General, his disinterest in other people’s points of view and his Gleichschaltung-like insistence on “loyalty” as the number one quality he expects from his staff — not idealism, integrity or even competence — is yet more evidence that Trump has no interest, and never had any interest, in being a powerful but constitutionally limited President of the United States. Instead, he wants to be a dictator, ruling by decree and with either a rubber-stamp legislature or no legislature at all — just like Vladimir Putin of Russia, Kim Jong Un of North Korea, Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey and all the other despots he admires and fawns over at international meetings.
If the voters of the United States of America want their country to remain a democracy — even the limited bourgeois republican democracy it has historically been — they will HAVE to reject President Trump decisively in the November 2020 election and vote for the only candidate who, despite his own flaws, has a chance of defeating and replacing Trump: the likely Democratic Party nominee, former Vice-President Joe Biden.