Daniel Miller Profile picture
Aug 31, 2024 9 tweets 2 min read Read on X
The incident at Arlington cemetery demonstrates a really profound and potentially underrated point.

Trump intimidates people into not holding him accountable. Imagine how much worse this could get if he’s the president and controls the immense powers of the executive?

1/🧵
Imagine if you’re a juror on a trial of a Trump associate. Imagine if you’re the judge. It would only be natural to worry about the consequences to you or your family if you held Trump accountable. Under that pressure, what would you do? What would any of us do?

2/
Imagine if you’re on a board of a company and you’re deciding how to vote on an issue that impacts a Trump-owned business. Do you vote in a way that benefits Trump because you’re worried if you don’t DOJ might launch a baseless investigation against you?

3/
Imagine you’re a Democratic member of Congress and you’re considering conducting oversight over his administration. You might think you’d be brave enough to do that. I hope you would be. I think you would be. But who knows how people would act in such a climate of fear.

4/
There are endless scenarios where the threat of Trump using the powers of the state (or mob) to punish you could intimidate or corrupt you.

We need to do a better job of imagining the type of world we could be living in if Trump wins. It would be far worse than we think.

5/5
Some more scenarios:

Imagine being a journalist who up till now has reported on Trump without fear or favor. In a second Trump term, you could find yourself under investigation. Trump could threaten to pull the “license” of your network. You could get doxxed or worse…. 6/5
… To be sure, I believe in the integrity of many journalists. But it is hard enough NOW to resist the impulses of bothsidesism, which newsrooms are incentivizing. It is hard enough NOW to be brave in the face of Trump’s mob. It will be SO MUCH worse if Trump wins… 7/6
If Trump wins, this kind of pressure and intimidation will be ubiquitous. It will be in the air we breathe. It will permeate every aspect of our society. No one will be immune.

You might think you’re strong enough to overcome it. To push back. Maybe. But …8/6
…the fact is, when most people get put to the test, they fail the test. It’s just human nature. Maybe we’re different. And part of me thinks we are, that we have the courage and integrity to stare down such fear.

But we really don’t want to find out one way or the other. END

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More from @DanielMillerEsq

Jan 19
My 2 yr old dismantled a remote when I wasn’t looking and pointed at a circuit, asking me what it was. As someone who spent years studying physics, I could answer that question, not that she understood.

But beyond just a technical explanation, a circuit represents progress…1/
… Thousands of yrs of human progress that led to the Scientific Revolution and the rejection of superstition, conspiracism, and cult worship in many parts of human civilization.

Certainly, those kinds of “thinking” were not totally abolished. In many places, they never left. 2/
You can probably see where this is going. This moment in our society, we are seeing an explosion of the conspiracism, superstition, and cult worship, the kinds of behavior that have historically made scientific achievement, and really achievements of all kinds so much harder. 3/
Read 6 tweets
Nov 28, 2024
The whole “The Rule of Law is dead” narrative is so toxic because if we’re supposed to give up here, what about people in Hungary, Turkey, Venezuela, and nations far more authoritarian than those? What about Black Americans decades/generations ago in the Jim Crow South?

1/🧵
It’s just kinda gross as privileged Americans to be complaining so much about our supposed plight.

You know a country where the Rule of Law is dead? North Korea. Other than some Republicans pathetically treating Trump like Kim Jong Un, our countries have no similarities to one another.

2/
I don’t begrudge people for being sad and angry and having doubts about our path forward as a country. I have felt and feel those emotions. But as flawed as our democracy is, I refuse to give up hope in it. I refuse to give up hope in America. I refuse to give up hope in my fellow Americans. 3/
Read 6 tweets
Nov 17, 2024
I’ve been thinking a lot about our country recently given the the quite deliberate attempt to dismantle it. Well, here are my thoughts:

Our country isn't just our government, even when the government is acting for the common good… and especially at a time like this. 1/🧵
Our country is not just our institutions. Or our democracy overall. It’s not just the collection of 50 states across America or our political parties. It's not all the people who voted in the election or even all the people who live in our country... 2/
Fundamentally, our country is so much bigger than how we’re made to feel at a time like this.

Our country is everyone who lives in it and their relationship to one another. Families. Friends. Communities. And yes, towns and cities and states and so on and so forth... 3/
Read 10 tweets
Nov 11, 2024
In case anyone is struggling with what happened last week, like I am, I’ve written ten ways we can take care of ourselves. I sent it to my friends, but posting here as well. I hope it's helpful. Be well, ya'll.

#1. Exercise. At a time like this when the world feels so uncertain, when we can’t help but let our thoughts get carried away with themselves, and when reality itself is pretty stark, we have to do what we can to get out of our own heads. Meditation could work, but I’m not good at that. I know how to exercise. Exercise also helps make our bodies strong to persevere through a highly unpredictable future.
#2. Meals with friends and family. I could have said time with friends and family, and of course, that’s a good idea as a general proposition. But I like big meals to balance out exercise. I also think there’s something very joyful about eating with people you love. We also need to create environments that are conducive to real laughter and meals are perfect for that.
#3. Shift your time horizon for change. Don’t get me wrong, doing well in the midterms is important, but we (everyone who cares about democracy) are not going to fix our country in the next two or four years. It could actually be far longer than that. This is about making sure America is strong, prosperous, and free for the next generation. Think long term. We won’t feel so tethered to any given election outcome, and it’s a more realistic perspective.
Read 11 tweets
Nov 4, 2024
The truth is, it was apparent from the beginning that Trump was a fascist. And it was apparent that many of the same dynamics that led to Nazism were enabling Trump's rise. These labels and comparisons could have been powerful tools to nip this threat in the bud 9 years ago. Instead, those that saw the truth were dismissed or ignored.

1/🧵
Even now, when Trump is quoting Mein Kampf ("poisoning the blood") and praising Hitler, when his enablers bear a striking similarity to those who enabled the rise of Nazism, when Trump is running to lead his country even after a failed coup, like Hitler with the Beer Hall Putsch, when Trump is promising violence and mass camps, when racism and antisemitism are defining features of his movement, even now, we are told by many mainstream voices that drawing these kinds of comparisons is unacceptable.

2/
The fact is that we will likely prevail over this threat, for now, with one arm tied behind our back. We will likely prevail over this threat, for now, without even being able to call it what it is. What's more, we are told "People don't care about democracy. They care about about gas prices." I don't agree, but even assuming this is true, fascism isn't good for gas prices. It's not good for inflation. It's not good for the economy.

3/
Read 5 tweets
Oct 29, 2024
Keep trying to explain to people how this election could be so close. Has Trump broken something in the electorate or did he just reveal something that was already there?

I think both. But remember, this is the country that elected W president. Twice...1/🧵
And as good as W looks compared to Trump, it was fairly insane that he was ever considered to be a serious candidate. I mean, let’s be honest. He had no business running our country.

2/
So the question isn’t: how is this particular election so close. It’s how has the electorate been so polarized, misinformed, and propagandized over decades? How did W beat Al Gore and John Kerry, two people of great dignity, intelligence, patriotism, and accomplishment? 3/
Read 4 tweets

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