At the Pentagon, a portrait of a general who Donald Trump had found insufficiently deferential to him in his first term was removed from a wall; photographs of the empty spot circulated on social media. Trump was set to sign a bevvy of executive orders, pledging to withdraw the US from the Paris climate agreement, to revoke policies promoting wind energy and electric cars, and to exert executive powers to speed up the construction of oil pipelines.

He was scheduled to revoke federal acknowledgement of transgender identity for the purposes of civil rights law, declaring in his inaugural address that “there are only two genders”. And Reproductiverights.gov, a federal web site aimed at helping women navigate abortion access, immediately went offline.

CBPOne, an app used by migrants to the US to manage their interactions with immigration officials, went dark when Trump was sworn in. An announcement posted on the programs website said that all existing appointments had been cancelled, leaving tens of thousands of people in the lurch. The press has reported that the new administration plans a series of high-profile raids in major cities this week, in search of immigrants to deport.

      • Nougat@fedia.io
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        21 hours ago

        Oh that’s true. I didn’t quite mean it that way. I mean to say that simple “backlash” isn’t enough to do anything.

          • Nougat@fedia.io
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            20 hours ago

            It was in 2020. It wasn’t in 2024, and that’s the paradigm we’re in now.

            If there’s midterms in '26, we’ll see. For the next two years at least, it’s time to hunker down and be prepared.