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"The people have the power... We are the government."—John Lennon
We are living through a period of open lawlessness at the highest levels of government.
Executive orders are issued to sidestep Congress. Federal law enforcement is deployed as a tool of retaliation. Protest is criminalized. Surveillance expands. Due process becomes optional. Courts are packed, ignored, or bypassed. Entire communities are terrorized under the guise of "law and order."
None of this is accidental. And none of it is temporary.
At a time when executive orders are used to punish dissent, federal agencies are weaponized against political opponents, protesters are met with militarized force, immigration enforcement is used as terror theater, and constitutional limits are treated as inconveniences rather than restraints, one fact has become impossible to ignore: politics won't fix a system that is broken beyond repair.
Elections have failed to check the police state.
Courts increasingly defer to it.
And a year into Trump's second term, what began as campaign rhetoric has hardened into administrative policy; what was once framed as a national emergency has become routine authoritarianism.
Executive power has expanded, accountability has contracted, and constitutional limits have been tested—and ignored—by the Trump administration with increasing confidence.
This is no longer a warning about what might happen. It is a record of what has already occurred.
This same authoritarian mindset has not remained confined to domestic policy. It has predictably expanded outward, revealing itself just as clearly in foreign affairs.
Trump's renewed saber-rattling over Greenland—treating another nation's territory as if it were a corporate asset to be acquired or controlled—reveals how deeply this distortion of power has taken hold.
It is the language of ownership, not governance; of command, not consent.