Courts, Chaos, and Control: Today’s Power Grabs Are Getting Harder to Hide
Today’s headlines reveal a pattern that is becoming impossible to ignore. From courtroom clashes to policy decisions that reshape rights and accountability, the system is being pushed in ways that demand attention. As reported across outlets like PBS NewsHour and NBC News, legal tensions and policy shifts are no longer isolated events. Instead, they form a broader strategy that impacts public trust, government transparency, and civil rights. If you are tracking the bigger picture, today is another clear signal that power is being tested—and in some cases, abused.
Midterms
Stratton Surges, Big Money Flails, and Illinois Democrats Pick Their Fighter
In a surprisingly decisive primary, Illinois Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton clinched the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate, overcoming heavily funded opponents and proving that endorsements, timing, and voter alignment still matter more than flashy spending alone. Backed by Governor J.B. Pritzker, Stratton defeated candidates like Raja Krishnamoorthi despite massive outside funding tied to crypto and political action groups flooding the race—yes, millions spent, and still not enough. The broader takeaway here is hard to ignore: while big money continues to shape elections, it doesn’t always control them, especially when voters rally behind a clear message and recognizable leadership. And honestly, watching well-funded campaigns crash and burn while grassroots momentum quietly wins? That’s the kind of plot twist American politics doesn’t serve nearly often enough.
Chamber of Whores
Proof of Citizenship, DHS Chaos, and Congress Playing Hardball—Welcome to This Week in “Normal” Politics
Congress has officially kicked off debate on the SAVE America Act, a controversial voting bill that would require documentary proof of U.S. citizenship to register for federal elections—something supporters frame as election security, but critics warn could disenfranchise millions of eligible voters who lack easy access to documents like passports or birth certificates. At the same time, the Senate is juggling a high-stakes confirmation hearing for Markwayne Mullin to lead the Department of Homeland Security amid an ongoing funding standoff tied to immigration enforcement policies, adding even more pressure to an already volatile political moment. The overlap isn’t accidental: voting access, immigration crackdowns, and federal power are all colliding in one chaotic legislative pileup. And honestly, when lawmakers are debating who gets to vote while simultaneously reshaping who enforces the rules, that’s not just governance—that’s a full-blown power struggle happening in real time.
Idaho Just Passed a Bathroom Ban So Extreme It Basically Turns Existing Into a Crime
In a sweeping and highly controversial move, the Idaho House has passed legislation that would criminalize transgender people for using bathrooms aligned with their gender identity—not just in schools or government buildings, but potentially across public spaces and private businesses as well. The bill allows penalties ranging from misdemeanors to felony charges for repeat offenses, while also opening the door for lawsuits against institutions that don’t enforce strict “biological sex” separation. Critics argue the law goes far beyond previous restrictions, effectively forcing businesses to police bathroom use and leaving transgender individuals with few, if any, safe options in public life. And honestly, when a state starts legislating where people can exist down to the bathroom level—with criminal penalties attached—that’s not about safety anymore, that’s about control dressed up as policy.

Pedo von Schitzenpantz aka The Tang Dictator
Trump Wants to Free the Guy Who Made Up the Biden Bribery Story—Yes, Really
This report reveals that Donald Trump is quietly pushing to release Alexander Smirnov, the former FBI informant who admitted to fabricating claims that Joe Biden and Hunter Biden took millions in bribes from the Ukrainian company Burisma—allegations that helped fuel a Republican impeachment push before collapsing under scrutiny. Smirnov later pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI and was sentenced to six years in prison, with prosecutors noting his claims were not only false but tied to contacts with Russian officials . Now, efforts to secure his release are raising serious concerns about political interference, accountability, and the normalization of disinformation at the highest levels of power. And honestly, when someone who helped spark a national political firestorm gets a potential early exit, it doesn’t just look suspicious—it looks like rewriting the consequences after the damage is already done.
Trump’s Wind Farm “Deals” Look a Lot Like Paying Companies to Kill Clean Energy
This sharp analysis breaks down a stunning proposal from the Trump administration: use taxpayer money—potentially close to $1 billion—to pay energy companies like TotalEnergies to abandon offshore wind projects that were already approved and in development. The plan would cancel major projects such as Attentive Energy and Carolina Long Bay, which were expected to power hundreds of thousands of homes, effectively resetting years of renewable energy progress while redirecting investment toward fossil fuels. Critics argue this isn’t just policy—it’s a strategic rollback of the clean energy transition, especially after courts blocked earlier attempts to halt wind development outright. And honestly, if the solution to losing in court is “fine, we’ll just pay them to stop,” that’s not energy policy—that’s sabotage with a government checkbook.
MAGA’s Grief Grift: Turning Tragedy Into a Political Business Model (Again)
This sharp takedown argues that elements of the MAGA movement have effectively weaponized grief—using tragedy, loss, and outrage as emotional fuel to drive political loyalty, fundraising, and media attention—while offering little in the way of actual solutions or accountability. The article frames this pattern as part of a broader strategy where outrage cycles keep supporters engaged, even as underlying issues like economic instability and public distrust continue to grow across the U.S. In other words, grief isn’t just processed—it’s packaged, monetized, and redeployed on loop. And honestly, if every crisis somehow turns into a merch drop or a campaign email, that’s not leadership—that’s a business model with a very convenient victim narrative.
Department of War Crimes
Oil Spikes, Missiles Fly, and Everyone’s Pretending This Isn’t Spiraling
The latest Iran war update paints a rapidly escalating situation: Iranian and allied forces are launching missile and drone attacks across the Gulf while the U.S. and Israel continue strikes on Iranian leadership, infrastructure, and energy assets—pushing the conflict into what analysts describe as both a military and economic war. Critical chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz are under threat, airspace disruptions are increasing, and global oil prices are surging as energy infrastructure becomes a direct target. At the same time, internal instability is growing, with arrests, leadership losses, and even U.S. officials resigning over the conflict’s direction, signaling cracks not just in Iran, but across the entire international response. And honestly, when a war starts hitting global energy supply, international airspace, and political leadership all at once, that’s not a “regional conflict” anymore—that’s a slow-motion global crisis everyone’s still trying to downplay.
Congress Wants “Red Lines” for Military AI—Because Apparently We Need to Say Out Loud What Shouldn’t Be Automated
A U.S. senator has introduced new legislation aimed at setting clear “red lines” for how artificial intelligence can be used by the military, as concerns grow over autonomous weapons and AI-driven targeting systems becoming more normalized in modern warfare. The bill seeks to establish guardrails around when AI can make decisions—especially lethal ones—and emphasizes maintaining human oversight in critical operations, reflecting rising bipartisan anxiety about accountability, ethics, and unintended escalation in conflicts. Lawmakers are increasingly warning that without firm rules, the U.S. risks drifting into a future where machines—not people—make life-and-death decisions on the battlefield . And honestly, if Congress is just now scrambling to define the boundaries of AI in war, that tells you everything—you don’t draw “red lines” unless you’re already worried someone’s about to cross them.
They Fired the Experts—Then Started a War That Needed Them
In a move that now looks less like “efficiency” and more like self-sabotage, the Trump administration reportedly gutted the State Department’s oil and gas expertise months before escalating conflict with Iran—eliminating the very analysts who would have modeled worst-case scenarios like the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for roughly 20% of global oil. According to reporting, more than 1,300 staff were cut, with the Bureau of Energy Resources hit especially hard, wiping out institutional knowledge and key relationships with Middle Eastern energy partners just as global oil markets began spiraling due to the war . The result? Skyrocketing prices, confused coordination, and a government now scrambling to respond to a crisis its own experts were literally hired to predict. And honestly, if you fire the people who plan for disasters right before triggering one, that’s not bad luck—that’s a policy choice with consequences.
Department of Injustice
Judge Explodes in Court, Kicks Out Trump-Linked Prosecutor—And Starts Asking Who’s Actually Running the DOJ
In a chaotic New Jersey courtroom, U.S. District Judge Zahid Quraishi abruptly threw a federal prosecutor out of a child exploitation hearing while blasting the Justice Department over what he described as a “sloppy” case and deeply confusing leadership structure tied to Trump-era appointments. The controversy centers on former interim U.S. Attorney Alina Habba and whether she still holds influence behind the scenes, despite officially stepping down—raising serious constitutional concerns about how prosecutors were installed without Senate confirmation. The judge didn’t just vent; he halted sentencing entirely and ordered top DOJ officials to testify under oath about who is actually in charge, signaling a major breakdown in trust between the judiciary and federal prosecutors. And honestly, when a judge has to pause a child exploitation case to figure out who’s running the office, that’s not just dysfunction—that’s the legal system waving a giant red flag and saying, “this is not normal.”
The Resistance
The FCC Isn’t “Controlling the Media”…But It’s Definitely Testing How Far It Can Push
This analysis digs into a growing concern: the Federal Communications Commission may be expanding its influence over broadcast media in ways that blur the line between regulation and control, particularly through renewed emphasis on rules like “equal opportunities” for political candidates and scrutiny of programming deemed partisan. While the FCC’s authority comes from the Communications Act of 1934 and its mandate to serve the “public interest,” critics warn that recent guidance targeting talk shows and political content could pressure networks to self-censor or alter coverage to avoid regulatory risk . That tension isn’t new—the now-defunct Fairness Doctrine once required balanced viewpoints before being scrapped over free speech concerns—but the current moment feels like a quiet reboot of that same debate . And honestly, when the government starts reminding broadcasters it controls their licenses right as political coverage heats up, that’s not just policy—that’s a power move everyone in media is absolutely noticing.
How to Be an “Active American” Without Losing Your Mind (or Your Weekend)
This sneak peek into a new civics workbook breaks down the basics of how U.S. government actually works—think how a bill becomes law and who controls what at the federal, state, and local levels—without the usual jargon or condescension. Designed for people who feel overwhelmed or disconnected from politics, the guide focuses on simple, repeatable actions that build real civic engagement over time, not performative outrage or endless doomscrolling. It emphasizes understanding systems like Congress, committees, and presidential veto power, while encouraging readers to track real legislation and identify where public pressure actually matters. And honestly, the vibe here is refreshing: you don’t need to be loud, famous, or terminally online to participate—you just need to know where you fit and show up consistently, which is somehow both the simplest and most radical advice in modern American politics.
American Gestapo
Pregnant Teens in Detention, One Facility, and Care That Critics Say Isn’t There
This PBS NewsHour report exposes a deeply troubling policy shift: since mid-2025, the Trump administration has been sending all pregnant unaccompanied migrant girls to a single detention facility in Texas—despite internal objections from child welfare officials who warn the center lacks the specialized medical care these high-risk pregnancies require. Experts and former officials argue that concentrating vulnerable teens in one location not only strains resources but may also limit access to reproductive healthcare, especially in a state with strict abortion laws, raising serious ethical and legal concerns about how the Office of Refugee Resettlement is handling these cases. And honestly, when the government’s solution for vulnerable, pregnant minors is “send them all to one place that isn’t equipped to care for them,” that’s not policy—that’s damage control disguised as strategy.
Homeland Security, Missing Records, and a Very Convenient Silence
This exclusive report raises serious concerns about the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, pointing to alleged gaps, missing documentation, and internal inconsistencies that critics say could signal deeper accountability issues inside one of the country’s most powerful agencies. Set against a backdrop of recent instability—including funding fights that triggered a partial Department of Homeland Security shutdown and ongoing controversies around immigration enforcement—the article suggests that transparency is not just lacking, it may be actively avoided. The bigger issue here is trust: when an agency responsible for national security can’t—or won’t—fully account for its own records, it raises uncomfortable questions about oversight, governance, and what else might be slipping through the cracks. And honestly, if “nothing to see here” keeps coming with missing paperwork, that’s not reassurance—that’s a red flag with a government letterhead.
Markwayne Mullin Said the Quiet Part Out Loud—And Somehow That’s Not Even the Shocking Part
This sharp critique zeroes in on Senator Markwayne Mullin and his increasingly blunt—and at times alarming—public statements, particularly around war rhetoric, loyalty to Donald Trump, and aggressive policy positions that critics say blur the line between governance and performance politics. As Mullin rises in influence, including being tapped for a major homeland security role, his comments reflect a broader shift within the Republican Party toward hardline messaging and unquestioning alignment with Trump’s agenda. Notably, Mullin has echoed support for militaristic posturing and controversial enforcement tactics, reinforcing concerns about how power is exercised at the highest levels of government. And frankly, when someone keeps “saying a lot,” it’s worth asking whether they’re revealing strategy—or just telling you exactly who they are.
The Epstein Class
Epstein Files Fallout Isn’t Slowing Down—Subpoenas, Missing Records, and a Whole Lot of “We’re Done Here” Energy
The latest EpsteinWiki update makes one thing painfully clear: the Epstein files saga is far from over, despite repeated claims from the Department of Justice that all relevant documents have been released. New developments include a House Oversight subpoena targeting Attorney General Pam Bondi over how the files were handled, alongside ongoing concerns about missing documents, inconsistent disclosures, and a growing list of powerful individuals facing scrutiny or fallout from their connections to Jeffrey Epstein. Even after millions of pages were released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, critics across party lines argue the rollout has been incomplete and, at times, deliberately confusing—raising serious questions about transparency, accountability, and who is still being protected . And honestly, when the official line is “case closed” but Congress is still issuing subpoenas and investigators keep finding gaps, that’s not closure—that’s a cover story that hasn’t quite held together.
Featured Resisters
- Operation Lifeboat – Trans Lifeboat Operation Lifeboat, hosted at translifeboat.org, is an emergency support initiative designed to assist transgender individuals who may need help relocating, accessing resources, or finding safe support networks during periods of heightened legal or political risk. The platform provides a centralized portal where individuals can request assistance and where volunteers can register to provide aid.
- OSINT Framework The OSINT Framework is a powerful, web-based directory of tools and resources designed for conducting open-source intelligence (OSINT) investigations. It organizes hundreds of free tools into a structured, clickable interface, allowing users to quickly locate resources for gathering publicly available information across the internet.
What We Are Watching Today
- Homeland Security Secy. Nominee Sen. Markwayne Mullin Testifies at Confirmation Hearing
- National Security Officials Testify on Global Threats to the U.S.
- Military Leaders Testify on Defense Strategy & National Security Concerns in Europe
- House Session
- Senate Session
- House Democratic Leader Jeffries Holds Press Event Amid Partial Government Shutdown
- Vice President Vance Remarks in Auburn Hills, Michigan
- Federal Reserve Chair Powell Holds News Conference
- Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works | 10:00 AM (EDT) | Meeting Details
- Senate Committee on Foreign Relations | 10:30 AM (EDT) | Meeting Details
- Senate Committee on Indian Affairs | 2:30 PM (EDT) | Meeting DetailsShow more…
Today’s Call to Action
1. Sign Up for a Virtual Event
- Know Your Rights: Protest Rights and Safety Practices (for all No Kings Attendees) Wednesday, Mar 18, 2026 8pm EDT
2. Read Today’s Resistance Survival Guide
3. Sign these Petitions
- Tell Lawmakers: We support your stand blocking funding until ICE is reformed. We also demand you address Trump’s weaponization of the FACE Act against journalists while pardoning clinic invaders. Hold hearings. Pass legislation. Stand firm. We’re watching.
- Tell Congress: Stop President Trump’s illegal boat strikes
- Urgent: Stop the Republican Attack on Voting Rights
4. Send these Pre Written Letters (They make great call scripts also)
5. Prepare for the International March 28th No Kings Protest
6. Volunteer with a Movement
Let’s Roll!
This is not just another news cycle. It is a turning point that shows how institutions respond under pressure. When judges push back, when lawmakers introduce new limits, and when journalists expose hidden decisions, those moments matter. However, awareness alone is not enough. Staying informed, sharing credible sources, and engaging with trusted platforms like GovTrack or investigative projects such as ProPublica helps turn information into action. The story is still unfolding, but one thing is clear—what happens now will shape what comes next.
Kitty’s Resistance Projects
- Resistance Directory: https://resistancedirectory.com/
- EpsteinWiki: Epsteinwiki.com
Support Resistance Kitty’s Work
- Kitty Merch: https://tr.ee/–Pu9s-BUL
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