This was supposed to be the week of Squid Game 2, and Beast Games (if you have kids, you know).
But who knew that an unscheduled breakout of MAGA Games would rival them?
Day 1 was the unexpected explosion.
Day 2…
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the shrapnel still reverberated around the right-wing universe.
Vivek Steps Back
First, Vivek Ramaaswamy, who started it all, pulled back and attempted to move on—although others didn’t want to let him.
But on his way back to “work,” he couldn’t help…
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but try to reframe the narrative (a direct assault on “Friends,” prom queens and sleepovers) that had gone so badly.
How do you unite a fractured right?
Vivek knows. Just pretend you had been attacking drag queens, Cardi B and woke history and everyone will like you again:
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Musk Goes All In
But Day 2 wasn’t about Ramaswamy, it was about Musk.
There’s doubling down. And tripling down. Maybe quadrupling down.
And then there’s what Musk did yesterday.
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First, he lashed out at those criticizing his views on immigration as “contemptible fools” who must be removed from the Republican Party:
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He then agreed with a tweet that called some in the MAGA movement the “retarded right.” (Honestly, it’s painful to even type the word in quotes):
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Late in the day, he went further—suggesting those who disagree with him perform a physiological challenging task, before declaring outright war on them…
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Elon’s War
Apparently, phase 1 of Elon’s declared war is to kneecap the Twitter accounts of numerous conservatives (who he has apparently been amplifying for months to help Trump win the election):
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Deprived of their blue checks and artificially inflated voices, the vanquished immediately questioned whether Musk was truly committed to free speech after all.
Hmmm. 🤔 Let us know when you get to the bottom of that mystery.
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That ushered in Phase 2 of Musk’s war…going undercover!
Incredibly, in some chat room where his new enemies were all whining about their new status, Musk appears to have joined under a false name (no, not John Barron) and lectured them for…
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…being “ungrateful mf’ers” for his having amplified them all this time.
All this deplatforming prompted right wing extremist Laura Loomer to say she now sympathized with the recent NY assassin:
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Civility?
By day’s end, it occurred to some on the right that this brouhaha might not help their cause.
So they began to pat themselves on the back that the entire blow-up has been civil debate at its finest.
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Yes, telling Americans of Indian descent to return to India, profane name-calling, censoring opposing views, and saying you now sympathize with an assassin will definitely rival Lincoln-Douglas as one of our nation’s finest debates.
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A couple other moments stuck out amid all this.
“Disheartened”?
Another set of reactions also emerged on Day 2.
Some in the MAGA alliance expressed dismay at the “persistent and dehumanizing attacks”…
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and the perpetuation of “racist tropes without consequence.” It seems to be a “pattern,” one disappointed commenter posted (between tweets of Elon in a Superman outfit), before asking: is this “an undercurrent that the party I unwilling—or worse, uninterested—to confront?”
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Um — it’s not an undercurrent, my friend.
More like an under-tsunami.
And Trump?
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Finally, perhaps most stunning of all, Donald Trump seems to have said absolutely nothing for an entire day. (Perhaps because he realizes that these two extreme factions of his coalition, in the end, can not co-exist.)
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The Christmas spirit faded quickly in MAGA-world, as the following day was marked by an explosion of infighting among its factions and biggest names.
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A week of of social media debate about tech companies hiring large numbers of employees from other nations, via HB-1 visas, exploded when DOGE co-chair Vivek Ramaswamy attempted to explain the trend. American culture is broken, he tweeted, marked
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by too many “Friends” reruns and prom queens and not enough admiration of characters like Screech.
That cultural broadside launched a predictable backlash of both rational responses along with fierce anti-immigrant invective.
Still a private citizen, Trump staked claims on the territory of two sovereign nations. After the President of Panama rebuffed Trump’s suggestion that the US should reclaim the Panama Canal from Panama, Trump replied: “we’ll see about that!”
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Early this morning, Trump staked another claim—this time declaring that the United States should seize Greenland from Denmark:
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In a different context, from a different source, such saber-rattling would spark international crises.
But it’s Trump, so most of the nation and world—his own allies included—dismiss these comments.
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While it’s unclear what will happen in the coming days, Musk’s chaos machine has clarified a number of realities even before the Trump term begins:
WATCH, RT and
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1) with his billions, willingness to invest it in primaries, and huge digital/disinformation megaphone via Twitter/X, Musk has more power/sway than Trump and is not afraid to show that to the world (past fat cats hid this fact better);
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2) just a few tweets from Musk can launch a battle royale within the Republican Party; given their thin margins in the House, and fear of primaries, that is a guarantee of chaos and perpetual leadership uncertainty;
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Re what happened yesterday re Cheney….remember what Trump demanded of Zelensky in that phone call—an announcement of an investigation.
That’s the Putin tactic.
And for Trump, the big win. Does most of the damage whatever the law is, and whatever the ultimate result…
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I explained this in “2025”:
“Remember, the president’s top priority is publicly announced investigations. Right-wing TV repeating the words ‘treason’ and ‘abuse of power’ in every segment. That’s the victory. Everything that follows is the gravy.
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The old notion that you only brought cases you were sure to win was so 20th century.
So institutionalist….
Investigations, charges and leaked tidbits of evidence dominated the airwaves of friendly media, destroying and bankrupting the enemy before a trial ever started.
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Arguably the most successful part of Trump’s first term was Operation Warp Speed—the rapid development of COVID-19 vaccines that Trump happily took great credit for late in his fist term.
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More broadly, humans did few things more effectively over the past century than develop and disseminate vaccines for a wide variety of ailments and diseases:
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A World Health Organization study released this year found that not only have global immunization efforts “saved an estimated 154 million lives over the past 50 years,” but that
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