agreed the people of the US are the only people who can change this xit. and agreed the “administration” uses social media gtropes of flame wars and outrage to attract headlines and yet follow the money: and also follow where it isn’t going. In alphabetical order, the rationale for sanctions on Belarus are stated thus
I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United States of America, determine that the actions and policies of certain members of the Government of Belarus and other persons to undermine Belarus’ democratic processes or institutions, manifested most recently in the fundamentally undemocratic March 2006 elections, to commit human rights abuses related to political repression, including detentions and disappearances, and to engage in public corruption including by diverting or misusing Belarusian public assets or by misusing public authority, constitute an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States,… This might sound familiar. if you take out the word ‘Belarus’ and substitute your favourite oligarchy Sanctions on Cuba are – like France’s insistence on collecting its so-called debt from Haiti for the slaves it lost – pure vengeance. Sanctions on Iran are directly responsible for economic and civil chaos, savage repression, mass murder. Or if you prefer, sanctions have had no effect whatever on the situation in Iran Tariffs are sanctions with the gloves on. They are effective only on territories that prefer money to the good of the people. A peruse of current and past sanctions at the Office of Foreign Assets Control is an education: <https://ofac.treasury.gov/sanctions-programs-and-country-information> Sanctions Programs and Country Information | Office of Foreign Assets Control<https://ofac.treasury.gov/sanctions-programs-and-country-information> ofac.treasury.gov<https://ofac.treasury.gov/sanctions-programs-and-country-information> [favicon.ico]<https://ofac.treasury.gov/sanctions-programs-and-country-information> The US regime’s stablecoin-driven determination to maintain USD supremacy is their one weak spot. Blockchain may even make it survive the impending AI crash Sanction the dollar now! s On 27 Jan 2026, at 11:35 am, [email protected] wrote: Send nettime-l mailing list submissions to [email protected] To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit https://lists.servus.at/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to [email protected] You can reach the person managing the list at [email protected] When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of nettime-l digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Re: Francine Prose: America feels like a country on the brink (Michael Benson) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2026 12:34:41 +0100 From: Michael Benson <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: Re: <nettime> Francine Prose: America feels like a country on the brink Message-ID: <caf3echedztoedtlksbbcqbcnmd5v7uec8t5uew0yeetd4rp...@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" Hi Felix, Ted, Brian, Patrice, everybody: Greetings from Ljubljana. A lot of interesting thoughts there in response to Francine's piece. In fairness to her, her core message, within our endless blizzard of distractions, with the shit perpetually hitting the fans?a version of Orwell's boot on the face forever, I suppose?was: stay focused on the most important thing. For her that is: A coup is underway. We are "on the brink." We can quibble about this. And I agree with Ted that no, actually we're in a post-coup situation. But I think her effort to wave away the distractions is interesting, is not just rhetorical, and underlines how crucial it is to try to discern signals in all that noise. Concerning where we are, years ago, reacting to a text from a friend who sent me word, as I sat waiting for an early flight in CDG, about the Republicans in Congress failing to vote to remove Trump from office immediately after January 6th, I responded that this would now be a "creeping coup." This was followed by everything we know, including the inexplicably weak response by the Biden Justice Department in attempting to hold the instigator of January 6th responsible, Biden's own vanity in not accepting his own decline in time to throw the door open to a credible Democratic primary, the media's continuous, ongoing, credulous, infuriating susceptibility to being mesmerized by the ongoing catnip of Trumpian provocations, etc etc. And so here we are. It's a classic case of "gradually, then suddenly." The coup has indeed taken place. Felix's point: And the white nationalists? I don't know. They will not go away, but they are not a majority. Sure they will not go away. And sure, they are a minority. But it reminds me of that observation, when Serbian radicals seized the massive amounts of JNA (Yugoslav National Army) weapons that had been stored in Bosnia during the Cold War (stored there with an eye to that territory being the logical mountainous redoubt to take a stand in if the USSR or NATO invaded, much as it had been when the Germans, Italians and Hungarians did in 1941-45), that you certainly don't need to be in a majority to destroy the work of generations. Not at all. You can be a distinct minority. You only need to have seized the weapons and so have a monopoly of force. Then you can trash everything. Not to belabor this, but that's why anyone on the "right" side (by which I mean, correct) immediately understood how manifestly unfair it was to then impose an arms embargo on the region, because the so-called Bosniaks were unarmed and exposed and the Serbian nationalist forces under Mladic and Karadzic had tanks, artillery, everything they needed for ethnic cleansing and mass murder. As I recall, some good pious peaceniks on this very list found that position appalling and untenable. It's when I started to realize that the old Left, which knew fascism when it saw it, and understood the necessity to fight it, had long since atrophied and fragmented. Ted writes: I'm not one of those left-identified bombasts who naively believes the president of Harvard should risk the entire university's existence for the fleeting glory of speaking truth to power. There's a lot to unpack here, but my initial reaction to this is: Why not? And who says it has to be fleeting? And why would that be naive? If any educational institution on the planet would seem to have the resources to fight back, wouldn't it be Harvard, with its $57 billion endowment? A university founded in 1636, prior even to the witch trials in nearby Salem? Doesn't an a-priori acceptance that taking a stand risks the "entire university's existence" for a moment of "fleeting glory" already give Trump and his dimwit fascists far more power than they really have? In the same way that accepting the narrative, pumped endlessly out of Moscow, that Russia is winning the war against Ukraine, gives Moscow far more power than it really has? After all, the Russians have conquered a grand total of 1% more Ukrainian territory in the last two years than they had in early 2024, at a staggering cost. They can't even take all of Donbas. However I agree with Ted's larger point that the question now clearly isn't how to parse the meaning of the word fascism, or quibbles about brinkmanship, but WTF to do about it. In that line I have been finding Rebecca Solnit's posts in Meditations in an Emergency well worth reading. I won't summarize it here, but it's to be found at: http://meditationsinanemergency.com Best, Michael ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: <[email protected]> Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2026 at 09:14 Subject: nettime-l Digest, Vol 31, Issue 14 To: <[email protected]> Send nettime-l mailing list submissions to [email protected] To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit https://lists.servus.at/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to [email protected] You can reach the person managing the list at [email protected] When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of nettime-l digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Re: Francine Prose: America feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover (TG) (Felix Stalder) 2. Re: nettime-l Digest, Vol 31, Issue 13 (Nat Gravenor) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2026 00:53:51 +0100 From: Felix Stalder <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: Re: <nettime> Francine Prose: America feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover (TG) Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed On 1/26/26 22:16, Brian Holmes via nettime-l wrote: The question, What is to be done*with these fascists* is definitely a good one. It follows the question, How can Trump be removed? that Ted posed about a year ago, asserting that*he will have to be removed*, which is true beyond doubt. I have thought about that question a lot in the intervening year. My hunch is that he cannot be removed from the outside, I mean by forces outside his coalition of fossil industries, tech, and white nationalists. The power of the state to squash dissent, to arbitrarily change the rules are, to force rational institutions into submission, to declare the state of emergency (as all the podcast-Schmittians in his entourage are so eager for) is just too great. Maybe the Supreme Court is going to limit some of the more capricious declarations of emergencies (tariffs), but I don't hold my breath. But what about the coalition itself? The fossil industries are massive, but the economics are clearly tilting towards "renewable" energies. Not for environmental, but for technological and geopolitical reasons. And, yes, the US is a large market that can insulate itself, but it's an ever shrinking part of the global economy. Not even the full force of the US state can stop that. It can delay and make it more costly, but it feels like that tipping point has been passed. Even the Europeans announced today a new 100 GW wind power project. That's more energy than the UK produces and certainly much cheaper and much quicker than building the equivalent of 100 nuclear power plants. It's not even close. And the shock over Greenland might have provided them with some incentive not to back down again. I find the contrast between the fossil empire (US) and the electric empire (China) to be a very useful way of framing how a lot of structural issues interrelate. The tech industry is universally hated. Just read the comment sections of say, Breitbart on stories about Elon Musk or Tesla. There is no love there. But it brings in a lot of money and holds a lot of power. But it has bet everything on AI, and it's difficult to see how this bet can be sustained much longer. AI will stay, but trillion-dollar investments in assets that have a very short life span and for which there is no clear demand will bump, at some point, against a hard limit. If crypto falls into a winter in parallel, the knives will come out. And the white nationalists? I don't know. They will not go away, but they are not a majority. So, I think the changes that the coalition fractures are real, particularly if the AI motor stops pulling the economy. But what then? It's clear that things will not go back; Biden tried to do that, and he failed; the conditions are just not there anymore. I think the best shot is to build up and support those forces that aligned with the electric paradigm shift. It's still tech, but a different one, it's still minerals, but different ones. And that's not only a technical questions but one that cuts across all sectors. And it needs the imagination that another world is possible, because the send of inevitability that fascism portrays (the law of the jungle is the true state of nature), is its most powerful weapon. -- | |||||||||||||||| http://felix.openflows.com | | |||||||||| https://tldr.nettime.org/@festal | | for secure communication, please use signal | ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2026 09:13:36 +0100 From: Nat Gravenor <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: Re: <nettime> nettime-l Digest, Vol 31, Issue 13 Message-ID: <camjwto_evdd7dows-kse-ynjgif2uecx5brjrj7kdedflfp...@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" On the brink? This sounds like Germany circa 1934. Am Mo., 26. Jan. 2026 um 22:17 Uhr schrieb < [email protected]>: Send nettime-l mailing list submissions to [email protected] To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit https://lists.servus.at/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to [email protected] You can reach the person managing the list at [email protected] When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of nettime-l digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Francine Prose: America feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover (TG) (Patrice Riemens) 2. Re: Francine Prose: America feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover (TG) (GM - tedbyfield) 3. Re: Francine Prose: America feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover (TG) (Brian Holmes) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2026 13:56:15 +0000 (UTC) From: Patrice Riemens <[email protected]> To: "<nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets" <[email protected]> Subject: <nettime> Francine Prose: America feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover (TG) Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Original to: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/jan/25/america-feels-like-a-country-on-the-brink-of-an-authoritarian-takeover America feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover Francine Prose This is the news we should be paying attention to. At least for the moment, everything else is a distraction Mon 26 Jan 2026 When we talk about our inability to pay attention, to concentrate, we often mean and blame our phones. It?s easy, it?s meant to be easy. One flick of our index finger transports us from disaster to disaster, from crisis to crisis, from maddening lie to maddening lie. Each new unauthorized attack and threatened invasion grabs the headlines, until something else takes its place, and meanwhile the government?s attempts to terrorize and silence the people of our country continue. So let me break it down. There is one story: our country is on the brink of an authoritarian takeover. In Minneapolis an innocent poet and an ER nurse at a VA hospital were both killed in cold blood by federal agents. It is happening now. Toddlers are being sent to detention centers; videos of their gyms for kids recall the youth choruses that the Nazis so proudly showed off at the Terez?n concentration camp. Intimidation and violence are being weaponized against the citizens of Minneapolis, some of whom are afraid to leave their houses for fear of being beaten, arrested and shackled, regardless of whether they are US citizens or asylum seekers or people from another country peacefully living and working here for decades. That is the news we should be paying attention to. At least for the moment, everything else is a distraction. I?m glad to have been informed about the heavy snow outside my window today and the local weather-travel advisory, but frankly, it?s snowed here before ? so why is it leading the news? Donald Trump?s inability to tell Greenland from Iceland during his speech at Davos is embarrassing, awful, sort of funny ? but it?s hardly the first time he?s made a mortifying mistake. I too want the Epstein files released, I want to know who is guilty, I want justice and respect for the survivors. But unless those revelations bring down the perpetrators, it?s not ? for the moment ? the story. The story is what?s happening in Minneapolis. And even that requires focus. Already the killing of Alex Pretti has partly diverted our attention from the killing of Renee Good. The story ? masked agents, arrests, violence, kidnappings, deportations without due process ? is happening all over the country, but in smaller increments, without as much pushback, and so far without the death of two innocent, middle-class, white bystanders. The story is about how decent and unselfish Renee Good and Alex Pretti were and about the falsehoods being told about them. The story is not letting ourselves be distracted from the real and present threat to our democracy. That threat is the story which our print, electronic and social media should be bannering at the top of every feed and every front page, every day. To consistently run that below the weather report is, quite frankly, to betray the struggles of the people of Minneapolis. The story is what we do now to support our fellow Americans in the midwest and to keep the violence and repression from spreading even further into our own streets and backyards. The story is avoiding the future that Stephen Miller and his minions are planning for us. The story is how we do it: not long after the 2017 inauguration of Donald Trump, I wrote, in these pages, about our need to stage a national strike. I know now that I underestimated the difficulties ? the amount of organization required, the need to strategize, the necessity to support and provide for people who will lose their livelihoods if they walk off the job. But many people are already scared to go to work or send their kids to school. Such a shutdown would be an enormous undertaking, to say the least. But it?s been done. Gandhi and Martin Luther King achieved at least some of their goals without resorting to violence. The people of Minneapolis have stopped business as usual in the city. That energy can ? and needs - to spread. Not to be alarmist, but unless we stay focused, it may soon be too late. This morning I went off ? I apologize! ? on a college classmate who sent an email link to a video of birds that others might want to watch as ?relief from the weather and the news?. I wasn?t saying we should stop enjoying the birds. I?m thrilled that so many robins elected to stick around this winter. I even like watching the crows and turkey vultures pick the roadkill clean. But I don?t really want ?a relief? from the loss of Renee Good and Alex Pretti or from the resistance beginning in Minneapolis. To crudely paraphrase Ecclesiastes, there is a time for everything. And this may not be the time to distract ourselves with the latest scandal or diplomatic blunder or with amusing images of the creatures who don?t much care if the humans beneath the snow-covered rooftops are living under a cruel and authoritarian regime. Francine Prose is a former president of PEN American Center and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2026 12:27:03 -0500 From: GM - tedbyfield <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: Re: <nettime> Francine Prose: America feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover (TG) Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed Just a few minutes ago I wrote: ?? The same fools who enabled this catastrophe with their interminable arendtsplaining and pedantic denialism expect us to attend to their interminable babbling about how wrong they were. They should step aside and give their bully pulpits to people who were right when it mattered. ?? These *postmature antifascists*, as I like to call them, are a dime a dozen and best ignored. Francine Prose is a reasonably distinguished person, deeply intelligent and clearly of good faith ? she plays on our team, so to speak. But anyone who?d write *now* that the US ?feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover? should be read with some skepticism, because the US is far past that brink. We?ve watched the prestigious institutions of one sector after another ? national governments abroad and government entities at home, national and even transnational corporations, mighty universities, major media outlets, pillars of civil society, and on and on ? quailing before Trump & Co. It?s perfectly understandable why they?d do so, and even a *rational choice*; I?m not one of those left-identified bombasts who naively believes the president of Harvard should risk the entire university?s existence for the fleeting glory of ?speaking truth to power.? But even so, to spend the last year watching this happen and *then* argue the US is ?on the brink?? WTF criteria would the country need for even the most prudent person to say we?ve gone over the brink?! Prose?s own words are ?our country *is* on the brink,? but The Guardian?s editors changed that to ?feels like? for their headline because out of journalistic caution. But that subtle shift, from fact to subjective impression, is in keeping with Prose?s own piece. It spends more time on the space cynical sysadmins used call PEBKAC, for Problem Exists Between Keyboard and Chair. If you read her essay, most of it?s concerned with phones screens, snow, media, robins, etc ? novelistic detail that puts us in the shoes, and chair, of a Serious Person. My comment above about pedantic denialists was prompted by a piece by Jonathan Rauch in The Atlantic ? ?Yes, It?s Fascism,? with the subhead ?Until recently, I thought it a term best avoided. But now, the resemblances are too many and too strong to deny.? He too spends much of his time maundering on about his subjective process, then he conjures up one of those ?best practice?-style lists cribbed from a melange of Authorities on Authoritarianism ? Snyder, Eco, Paxton, etc ? of criteria needed for anointing something Officially Fascist. He introduces the list with a choice bit of rhetoric that doffs its hat to some sort of ?methodology? but ultimately affirms his own capricious authority: ?Fascism is not a territory with clearly marked boundaries but a constellation of characteristics. When you view the stars together, the constellation plainly appears.? A decade too late, but who?s counting? Well, I am, actually. Not so much the exact number of years have passes since I argued that Trump would need be forcibly removed from the White House (ten), but more the qualitative sense of time that permeates people?s thinking and enables their passivity. When you say we?re *on the brink?, you?re saying it hasn?t ?really? happened yet, which justifies passivity. Arguing it isn?t ?really? fascism achieves the same effect by slightly different means, by focusing on discernment. Saying of something evil that ?this is what _______ looks like? ? fascism, authoritarianism, whatever, it doesn?t matter because it?s all just content for a mad lib ? does it as well, but with a semiotic twist: it may or may not not actually *be* _____, but it ?looks like? it. And, of course, protestation like ?this isn?t who we are? and ?we?re better than this? do the same, but in still other ways. The list of these rhetorical sleights of hand could go on and on. I have to make clear that the people saying these things should be assumed to be acting in good faith, caring for the public interest, and all those other warm-fuzzy things. I don?t mean to speak poorly of them as individuals. But as a *class* they?re pretty problematic, because the sum total of their efforts is to postpone the venerable question *what is to be done?* And in much the same way that they are, by their own admission, postmature antifascists, we should assume that, given the chance, they?d be among the first to prematurely declare victory over the fascists ? because that?s when liberals would have to ask the much rougher question what is to be done *with these fascists?* Cheers, Ted On 26 Jan 2026, at 8:56, Patrice Riemens via nettime-l wrote: Original to: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/jan/25/america-feels-like-a-country-on-the-brink-of-an-authoritarian-takeover America feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover Francine Prose This is the news we should be paying attention to. At least for the moment, everything else is a distraction Mon 26 Jan 2026 When we talk about our inability to pay attention, to concentrate, we often mean and blame our phones. It?s easy, it?s meant to be easy. One flick of our index finger transports us from disaster to disaster, from crisis to crisis, from maddening lie to maddening lie. Each new unauthorized attack and threatened invasion grabs the headlines, until something else takes its place, and meanwhile the government?s attempts to terrorize and silence the people of our country continue. So let me break it down. There is one story: our country is on the brink of an authoritarian takeover. In Minneapolis an innocent poet and an ER nurse at a VA hospital were both killed in cold blood by federal agents. It is happening now. Toddlers are being sent to detention centers; videos of their gyms for kids recall the youth choruses that the Nazis so proudly showed off at the Terez?n concentration camp. Intimidation and violence are being weaponized against the citizens of Minneapolis, some of whom are afraid to leave their houses for fear of being beaten, arrested and shackled, regardless of whether they are US citizens or asylum seekers or people from another country peacefully living and working here for decades. That is the news we should be paying attention to. At least for the moment, everything else is a distraction. I?m glad to have been informed about the heavy snow outside my window today and the local weather-travel advisory, but frankly, it?s snowed here before ? so why is it leading the news? Donald Trump?s inability to tell Greenland from Iceland during his speech at Davos is embarrassing, awful, sort of funny ? but it?s hardly the first time he?s made a mortifying mistake. I too want the Epstein files released, I want to know who is guilty, I want justice and respect for the survivors. But unless those revelations bring down the perpetrators, it?s not ? for the moment ? the story. The story is what?s happening in Minneapolis. And even that requires focus. Already the killing of Alex Pretti has partly diverted our attention from the killing of Renee Good. The story ? masked agents, arrests, violence, kidnappings, deportations without due process ? is happening all over the country, but in smaller increments, without as much pushback, and so far without the death of two innocent, middle-class, white bystanders. The story is about how decent and unselfish Renee Good and Alex Pretti were and about the falsehoods being told about them. The story is not letting ourselves be distracted from the real and present threat to our democracy. That threat is the story which our print, electronic and social media should be bannering at the top of every feed and every front page, every day. To consistently run that below the weather report is, quite frankly, to betray the struggles of the people of Minneapolis. The story is what we do now to support our fellow Americans in the midwest and to keep the violence and repression from spreading even further into our own streets and backyards. The story is avoiding the future that Stephen Miller and his minions are planning for us. The story is how we do it: not long after the 2017 inauguration of Donald Trump, I wrote, in these pages, about our need to stage a national strike. I know now that I underestimated the difficulties ? the amount of organization required, the need to strategize, the necessity to support and provide for people who will lose their livelihoods if they walk off the job. But many people are already scared to go to work or send their kids to school. Such a shutdown would be an enormous undertaking, to say the least. But it?s been done. Gandhi and Martin Luther King achieved at least some of their goals without resorting to violence. The people of Minneapolis have stopped business as usual in the city. That energy can ? and needs - to spread. Not to be alarmist, but unless we stay focused, it may soon be too late. This morning I went off ? I apologize! ? on a college classmate who sent an email link to a video of birds that others might want to watch as ?relief from the weather and the news?. I wasn?t saying we should stop enjoying the birds. I?m thrilled that so many robins elected to stick around this winter. I even like watching the crows and turkey vultures pick the roadkill clean. But I don?t really want ?a relief? from the loss of Renee Good and Alex Pretti or from the resistance beginning in Minneapolis. To crudely paraphrase Ecclesiastes, there is a time for everything. And this may not be the time to distract ourselves with the latest scandal or diplomatic blunder or with amusing images of the creatures who don?t much care if the humans beneath the snow-covered rooftops are living under a cruel and authoritarian regime. Francine Prose is a former president of PEN American Center and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences -- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: https://www.nettime.org # contact: [email protected] ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2026 15:16:21 -0600 From: Brian Holmes <[email protected]> To: "<nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets" <[email protected]> Subject: Re: <nettime> Francine Prose: America feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover (TG) Message-ID: < canuitgykcx1uotu6z-uo68os8f3pcl2fe8g4jcq3oz+ksvy...@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" The question, What is to be done *with these fascists* is definitely a good one. It follows the question, How can Trump be removed? that Ted posed about a year ago, asserting that *he will have to be removed*, which is true beyond doubt. I have thought about that question a lot in the intervening year. Then there is also the question, What is to be done with ourselves, with each one of us? Which may not be the least of the problems. The liberals, no doubt Francine Prose among them, had to wait until white middle-class people were gunned down to start getting serious about the fascist takeover. So that was their limit. One could complain that Gaza should have taught them that, that George Floyd's murder should have taught them that, that Afghanistan or Vietnam or whatever grotesque American imperialist war should have taught them that long ago. It's true, but since we have to get on with the business of removing Trump from power, all these complaints are not to be forgotten, but instead to be relativized. The liberals are part of an evolving political spectrum, like the leftist intellectuals and the anarchists, who *will have to admit that they actually live in this country* (dixit Ted again). On the basis of actions at the grassroots, mostly led by Latinos but picked up increasingly widely, the Democrats have finally started to step up, as individual representatives and to some degree as a party. For them too, the country is "suddenly" on the brink of authoritarianism. Why did it take so long? Small "d" democratic politics does not only happen in the voting booth. It happens when molecular forces at the grassroots, and in the institutions, and in the professions, all start relaying distinct demands with a common sense of urgency. At moments of crisis these demands pierce the usual capture of political representatives by interest groups. The process is finally starting in the US. But it's a long way from removing Trump from power (although probably a lot closer to removing ICE from Minnesota). What to do with the fascists is a harder question. There are a lot of fascists now. My sense is that liberal denial of real problems allowed all this to get much worse than it had to. I think that as Americans, most of us participate in some way in that denial. Just like Europeans participated, for convenience, in the processes that made the US into the global hegemon. We evaded our responsibilities, in exchange for careers, money, entertainment, or just the cheap and ever-available pleasures of cynicism and nihilism. Broken institutions are terrifying - because violence leaps into the institutional void. But there are reasons why those institutions broke. Their collapse can also represent a possibility, the possibility for reconstruction (an urgent need that follows every civil war). There's a steep learning curve ahead for anyone who wants to participate in removal and rebuilding. First, because you have to get over denialism and take the problems of *this country* seriously. Second, because you have to find a way to deal with 40% of the Republican base, who *still* think Trump is doing a great job. More effort, citizens and non-citizens, if you don't want to live under a dictatorship. Brian On Mon, Jan 26, 2026 at 11:27?AM GM - tedbyfield via nettime-l < [email protected]> wrote: Just a few minutes ago I wrote: ?? The same fools who enabled this catastrophe with their interminable arendtsplaining and pedantic denialism expect us to attend to their interminable babbling about how wrong they were. They should step aside and give their bully pulpits to people who were right when it mattered. ?? These *postmature antifascists*, as I like to call them, are a dime a dozen and best ignored. Francine Prose is a reasonably distinguished person, deeply intelligent and clearly of good faith ? she plays on our team, so to speak. But anyone who?d write *now* that the US ?feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover? should be read with some skepticism, because the US is far past that brink. We?ve watched the prestigious institutions of one sector after another ? national governments abroad and government entities at home, national and even transnational corporations, mighty universities, major media outlets, pillars of civil society, and on and on ? quailing before Trump & Co. It?s perfectly understandable why they?d do so, and even a *rational choice*; I?m not one of those left-identified bombasts who naively believes the president of Harvard should risk the entire university?s existence for the fleeting glory of ?speaking truth to power.? But even so, to spend the last year watching this happen and *then* argue the US is ?on the brink?? WTF criteria would the country need for even the most prudent person to say we?ve gone over the brink?! Prose?s own words are ?our country *is* on the brink,? but The Guardian?s editors changed that to ?feels like? for their headline because out of journalistic caution. But that subtle shift, from fact to subjective impression, is in keeping with Prose?s own piece. It spends more time on the space cynical sysadmins used call PEBKAC, for Problem Exists Between Keyboard and Chair. If you read her essay, most of it?s concerned with phones screens, snow, media, robins, etc ? novelistic detail that puts us in the shoes, and chair, of a Serious Person. My comment above about pedantic denialists was prompted by a piece by Jonathan Rauch in The Atlantic ? ?Yes, It?s Fascism,? with the subhead ?Until recently, I thought it a term best avoided. But now, the resemblances are too many and too strong to deny.? He too spends much of his time maundering on about his subjective process, then he conjures up one of those ?best practice?-style lists cribbed from a melange of Authorities on Authoritarianism ? Snyder, Eco, Paxton, etc ? of criteria needed for anointing something Officially Fascist. He introduces the list with a choice bit of rhetoric that doffs its hat to some sort of ?methodology? but ultimately affirms his own capricious authority: ?Fascism is not a territory with clearly marked boundaries but a constellation of characteristics. When you view the stars together, the constellation plainly appears.? A decade too late, but who?s counting? Well, I am, actually. Not so much the exact number of years have passes since I argued that Trump would need be forcibly removed from the White House (ten), but more the qualitative sense of time that permeates people?s thinking and enables their passivity. When you say we?re *on the brink?, you?re saying it hasn?t ?really? happened yet, which justifies passivity. Arguing it isn?t ?really? fascism achieves the same effect by slightly different means, by focusing on discernment. Saying of something evil that ?this is what _______ looks like? ? fascism, authoritarianism, whatever, it doesn?t matter because it?s all just content for a mad lib ? does it as well, but with a semiotic twist: it may or may not not actually *be* _____, but it ?looks like? it. And, of course, protestation like ?this isn?t who we are? and ?we?re better than this? do the same, but in still other ways. The list of these rhetorical sleights of hand could go on and on. I have to make clear that the people saying these things should be assumed to be acting in good faith, caring for the public interest, and all those other warm-fuzzy things. I don?t mean to speak poorly of them as individuals. But as a *class* they?re pretty problematic, because the sum total of their efforts is to postpone the venerable question *what is to be done?* And in much the same way that they are, by their own admission, postmature antifascists, we should assume that, given the chance, they?d be among the first to prematurely declare victory over the fascists ? because that?s when liberals would have to ask the much rougher question what is to be done *with these fascists?* Cheers, Ted On 26 Jan 2026, at 8:56, Patrice Riemens via nettime-l wrote: Original to: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/jan/25/america-feels-like-a-country-on-the-brink-of-an-authoritarian-takeover America feels like a country on the brink of an authoritarian takeover Francine Prose This is the news we should be paying attention to. At least for the moment, everything else is a distraction Mon 26 Jan 2026 When we talk about our inability to pay attention, to concentrate, we often mean and blame our phones. It?s easy, it?s meant to be easy. One flick of our index finger transports us from disaster to disaster, from crisis to crisis, from maddening lie to maddening lie. Each new unauthorized attack and threatened invasion grabs the headlines, until something else takes its place, and meanwhile the government?s attempts to terrorize and silence the people of our country continue. So let me break it down. There is one story: our country is on the brink of an authoritarian takeover. In Minneapolis an innocent poet and an ER nurse at a VA hospital were both killed in cold blood by federal agents. It is happening now. Toddlers are being sent to detention centers; videos of their gyms for kids recall the youth choruses that the Nazis so proudly showed off at the Terez?n concentration camp. Intimidation and violence are being weaponized against the citizens of Minneapolis, some of whom are afraid to leave their houses for fear of being beaten, arrested and shackled, regardless of whether they are US citizens or asylum seekers or people from another country peacefully living and working here for decades. That is the news we should be paying attention to. At least for the moment, everything else is a distraction. I?m glad to have been informed about the heavy snow outside my window today and the local weather-travel advisory, but frankly, it?s snowed here before ? so why is it leading the news? Donald Trump?s inability to tell Greenland from Iceland during his speech at Davos is embarrassing, awful, sort of funny ? but it?s hardly the first time he?s made a mortifying mistake. I too want the Epstein files released, I want to know who is guilty, I want justice and respect for the survivors. But unless those revelations bring down the perpetrators, it?s not ? for the moment ? the story. The story is what?s happening in Minneapolis. And even that requires focus. Already the killing of Alex Pretti has partly diverted our attention from the killing of Renee Good. The story ? masked agents, arrests, violence, kidnappings, deportations without due process ? is happening all over the country, but in smaller increments, without as much pushback, and so far without the death of two innocent, middle-class, white bystanders. The story is about how decent and unselfish Renee Good and Alex Pretti were and about the falsehoods being told about them. The story is not letting ourselves be distracted from the real and present threat to our democracy. That threat is the story which our print, electronic and social media should be bannering at the top of every feed and every front page, every day. To consistently run that below the weather report is, quite frankly, to betray the struggles of the people of Minneapolis. The story is what we do now to support our fellow Americans in the midwest and to keep the violence and repression from spreading even further into our own streets and backyards. The story is avoiding the future that Stephen Miller and his minions are planning for us. The story is how we do it: not long after the 2017 inauguration of Donald Trump, I wrote, in these pages, about our need to stage a national strike. I know now that I underestimated the difficulties ? the amount of organization required, the need to strategize, the necessity to support and provide for people who will lose their livelihoods if they walk off the job. But many people are already scared to go to work or send their kids to school. Such a shutdown would be an enormous undertaking, to say the least. But it?s been done. Gandhi and Martin Luther King achieved at least some of their goals without resorting to violence. The people of Minneapolis have stopped business as usual in the city. That energy can ? and needs - to spread. Not to be alarmist, but unless we stay focused, it may soon be too late. This morning I went off ? I apologize! ? on a college classmate who sent an email link to a video of birds that others might want to watch as ?relief from the weather and the news?. I wasn?t saying we should stop enjoying the birds. I?m thrilled that so many robins elected to stick around this winter. I even like watching the crows and turkey vultures pick the roadkill clean. But I don?t really want ?a relief? from the loss of Renee Good and Alex Pretti or from the resistance beginning in Minneapolis. To crudely paraphrase Ecclesiastes, there is a time for everything. And this may not be the time to distract ourselves with the latest scandal or diplomatic blunder or with amusing images of the creatures who don?t much care if the humans beneath the snow-covered rooftops are living under a cruel and authoritarian regime. Francine Prose is a former president of PEN American Center and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences -- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: https://www.nettime.org # contact: [email protected] -- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: https://www.nettime.org # contact: [email protected] ------------------------------ Subject: Digest Footer -- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: https://www.nettime.org # contact: [email protected] ------------------------------ End of nettime-l Digest, Vol 31, Issue 13 ***************************************** ------------------------------ Subject: Digest Footer -- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: https://www.nettime.org # contact: [email protected] ------------------------------ End of nettime-l Digest, Vol 31, Issue 14 ***************************************** -- Michael Benson *Kinetikon Pictures* http://michael-benson.com [email protected] ------------------------------ Subject: Digest Footer -- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: https://www.nettime.org # contact: [email protected] ------------------------------ End of nettime-l Digest, Vol 31, Issue 15 ***************************************** -- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: https://www.nettime.org # contact: [email protected]
