Has Trump Gone To War Against An American City? Does He Have Storm Troopers Gassing Peaceful Protesters? The Most Repulsive Reelection Stunt Ever Pulled

The Psychedelic Furs were always ahead of their time. The song above, lead track on the Forever Now album, was written and recorded almost four decades ago!

You have to have a partyWhen you're in a state like thisYou can really move it allYou have to vote and changeYou have to get right out of itLike out of all this messYou'll say yeah to anythingIf you believe all this butDon't cry, don't do anythingNo lies, back in the governmentNo tears, party time is here againPresident gas is up for presidentLine up, put your kisses downSay yeah, say yes againStand up, there's a head countPresident gas on everything but roller skatesIt's sick the price of medicineStand up, we'll put you on your feet againOpen up your eyesJust to check that your asleep againPresident gas is president gas againHe comes in from the left sometimesHe comes in from the rightIt's so heavily advertised that he wants you and IIt's a real cowboy set, electric companyEvery day is happy daysIt's hell without the sin, butDon't cry, don't do anythingNo lies, back in the governmentNo tears, party time is here againPresident gas is up for presidentLine up, put your kisses downSay yeah, say yes againStand up, there's a head countPresident gas on everything but roller skatesIt's sick the price of medicineStand up, we'll put you on your feet againOpen up your eyes just to check that your asleep againPresident gas is president gas againPresident gasOh, president gasWhoa, president gasOh, president gasWhoa, president gasOh, president gasWhoa, president gas

On Saturday evening L.A. Times reporter Richard Read noted that "Undeterred by civil rights lawsuits and pleas from local officials to stand down, federal agents in camouflage have continued their crackdown against demonstrators in Portland, Ore., into the weekend, launching impact explosives and tear gas late Friday at downtown protesters shouting, 'Go home.' Since early in the week, agents dispatched by the Trump administration, some in unmarked vehicles, have confronted and detained activists, according to Oregon state officials, charging at least 13 with crimes related to demonstrations. One protester was hospitalized with skull fractures July 11 after a federal agent shot him in the face with a projectile. By the administration’s move to make Portland an example in a national 'law and order' initiative just months before the presidential election, the conduct of federal forces here has accomplished what weeks of strife between protesters and Oregon officials had failed to do-- uniting them, at least momentarily, in common cause."

“Every American should be repulsed when they see this happening,” state Atty. Gen. Ellen Rosenblum said in a statement. “If this can happen here in Portland, it can happen anywhere.”Rosenblum on Friday sought an injunction against federal law enforcement agencies, accusing them of seizing protesters without probable cause, pulling activists into unmarked vehicles and detaining and questioning them without basis for arrests. She said agents in Portland wore no identifying information other than the label “police” on their military fatigues....Trump is doing this because it plays well with the right-wing media and his political base," Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) said in an interview Friday. "If Trump thinks he can get away with this in the Pacific Northwest, he’s going to try this elsewhere.”

Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch dubbed the Trump-provoked violence in Portland Trump’s made-for-TV fascism and predicted it won't get him reelected. "As protests in Portland over police brutality and racial inequity near the end of a second month," wrote Bunch, "these heavily camouflaged, helmeted and anonymous agents have routinely fired tear gas-- even though courts have mostly banned local police from deploying it-- and projectiles at protesters near a federal building in Oregon’s largest city. And-- as captured in video or described by victims-- these agents even snatched peaceful protesters off Portland sidewalks, shoved them into unmarked vans and took them for questioning without identifying themselves or their agency. These are the kind of Kafkaesque, police-state tactics that most civilized folks hoped had gone the way of Chile’s late authoritarian (and U.S.-installed) 20th-century dictator Augusto Pinochet, only to return for the increasingly desperate and dangerous final days of Trump’s disastrous presidency and America’s descent into madness and chaos."

These hazy, tear-gas-soaked nights in the Pacific Northwest have been five years in the making-- the inevitable climax of a story line that began on a morning in June 2015 when Trump descended a gilded escalator to start building a movement of right-wing rabble with hate speech against Mexicans. You were warned in the early days of his presidency, when Trump made good on his promise to the white-supremacist unions of cops and federal border and immigration agents to “take the shackles off,” cheering on police brutality while setting the stage for agents to show up at schools and courthouses and disappear undocumented immigrants with deep roots in their communities. Those who said nothing or uttered toothless platitudes at these tactics, or the agents ripping toddlers from the arms of their parents at the Mexican border, shouldn’t be shocked by now seeing Gestapo tactics in the streets of Portland.Indeed, Trump’s inexorable frog-in-boiling-water push toward full-on authoritarianism has been so successful that almost no attention was paid on July 1, when the government announced a program with the Orwellian name of Protecting American Communities Task Force, or PACT (apparently the “F” is silent), which had the started goal of protecting statue and monuments. But PACT’s real open-ended and ill-defined mission seems to be escalating conflict in a handful of cities, like Portland, with the most-active far-left communities.PACT is comprised of officers from an array of agencies including U.S. Customs and Border Protection (yes, even though the Canadian border is 285 long miles away)-- whose union Twitter feed is a steady stream of pro-Trump propaganda, including diatribes against “the Radical Left”-- as well as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the U.S. Marshals Service. Under the leadership of Wolf-- a presidential lapdog who wields the powerful hammer of Homeland Security even though he’s only been confirmed as an undersecretary-- this is a “dream team” for a Trumpian secret police.And there’s a very real chance that Pinochet-style federal policing may be coming to your hometown very soon. Acting Homeland Security Deputy Secretary Ken Cuccinelli (also not Senate confirmed) told NPR on Friday that “this is a posture we intend to continue not just in Portland but in any of the facilities that we’re responsible for around the country.”Chad Wolf set the template for these unwelcome-- literally no major government official in Oregon has asked for this intervention and most have pleaded for the federales to go home-- mini-invasions when he showed up in Portland on Thursday, snubbed elected leaders but met with the head of Portland’s police union, and posted a picture on Twitter of himself rallying the troops, whoever these troops actually are. “Our men and women in uniform are patriots. We will never surrender to violent extremists on my watch,” Wolf tweeted-- trying to make it sound like his camouflaged crusaders were ready to storm Omaha Beach rather than fire rubber bullets at graffiti vandals armed with chalk.

Has Trump offered him a preemptive pardon? Why doesn't the Senate act?Wolf’s renegade Homeless Security army is tragic vindication for those of who’ve been warning since the early 2000s that the extensive security apparatus that America created after 9/11-- from that ominous too-1930s-Germanic sounding moniker of “Homeland Security” to the level of militarized policing unavoidable seen since George Floyd’s murder-- would be turned against U.S. citizens, especially if America ever elected a president with an authoritarian streak.For now, though, Trump’s 21st Century fascism is mostly a political performance. Unable to run on his leadership or his record, with a mounting coronavirus death toll that just passed 140,000 and 11 percent unemployment that may get worse again before it gets better, the president is hoping to save his presidency with fear. But his desperate and misguided efforts to recreate Richard Nixon’s 1968 “law and order” campaign and somehow scare voters about Joe Biden won’t work unless he can bring nightly scenes of disorder and chaos into your living room....Yes, it’s more than a little ironic that all of this is unfolding on the very weekend that the greatest living American in the arena of civil rights, U.S. Rep. John Lewis, died at age 80 (and that we also lost another champion of democracy, the Rev. C.T. Vivian). Lewis had a complicated relationship with the type of left-wing activists leading the current protests in Portland but there’s no doubt that the late congressman-- famously beaten by both angry mobs during 1961′s Freedom Rides and by Alabama troopers near the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma four years later-- would have been appalled at the government’s brutal crackdown on any form of dissent there.“We are tired of being beaten by policemen,” Lewis said in his address to the 1963 March on Washington. “We are tired of seeing our people locked up in jail over and over again. ... I appeal to all of you to get into this great revolution that is sweeping this nation. Get in and stay in the streets of every city, every village and hamlet of this nation until true freedom comes, until the revolution of 1776 is complete.”The air has been filled all weekend with political platitudes about Lewis, many of them from hypocrites who’ve devoted their political careers to fighting everything he stood for, from voting rights to basic human rights. There is so much work left undone to honor the legacy of this great man, but a simple start would be to get Trump’s tin soldiers out of Portland, today if possible.