🧵An awesome woman named Beth Kelley shared this with me and wanted me to share it with you.
If you're wondering what we, as little people caught in a big web can do, Beth has you covered:
Here is her Advice:
If you’re wondering, “what can I do” about the current “dismantling of the administrative state” but are too busy to research what to do or where to begin – or to sift through all the crappy/phony stuff – I’m sharing what I’ve discovered – while keeping it as brief as possible.
· Calling companies matters. When Target was backing-off DEI, a lot of women called their headquarters and said they were going to stop shopping there. We have to keep up this kind of pressure.
· Calls are best. Emails, faxes are a waste. Letters REALLY get attention.
· Interns answer the calls, letters, etc. and then tally the results to see what people care about
· Your requests/input need to be …
o Specific, actionable: Vote against X
o Within their power: Don’t call your House rep about confirmations, for example
· US representatives have budget, debt-ceiling power
US senators can do the following (Senate rules favor the minority):
No cloture, unanimous consent, unrecorded voice votes, waiving debate time
Hold nominees (One sen can do – like Schatz, Tuberville)
Filibuster
Force quorum calls
Contact your state AG about bringing/joining lawsuits against Trump/Musk/etc.
Contact your state reps about state laws – very important, don’t forget them!
Thank you calls are very important, too!!!!!
Apparently, Congressional voice mail inboxes are full. Keep calling after all this initial attention. They need to know our concerns aren’t fleeting.
Check the calendars/websites/etc. of your state and US representation for town halls and go. And if they don’t have any scheduled – call them to tell them to schedule some.
At town halls, they only get to a few questions. You can typically take-in an 8.5x11 sign to hold up.
🧵Living History: Don’t Give Up the Ship with Representative Jason Crow
We are living through a moment future historians will struggle to explain without disbelief. A sitting president has publicly called for the execution of members of Congress. The U.S. military has carried out strikes of dubious legality outside a declared war. Senior commanders have resigned. Others have testified behind closed doors that no one stopped them.
And when six members of Congress who are military vets reminded U.S. service members of a principle settled since Nuremberg not to follow illegal orders, the White House responded not with denial or evidence, but with rage.
That was the context for my conversation with Representative Jason Crow of Colorado’s 6th District, one of the six lawmakers featured in the Don’t Give Up the Ship video that ignited Donald Trump’s backlash.
🧵The Whole World is Getting Dumber
(And the Smartphone Did It)
How’s this for a gut punch?
The entire developed world is getting dumber.
Don’t believe me? Check out this graph that shows a world wide “dumbing” across three core cognitive domains—math, reading, and science-that occurs right after the introduction of the smart phone.
And no, it’s not “woke teachers,” or “lazy kids,” or the Department of Education.
This isn’t even a uniquely American story.
The trends are global. OECD-wide.
Finland to France. Japan to Germany. Australia to the U.S.
Good systems and bad.
Everyone is slipping.
And the timing lines up perfectly with the most consequential technological shift of our lifetime:
the smartphone + social media + high-speed mobile internet.
That’s the trilogy that broke attention spans, rewired cognition, and kneecapped learning.
🚨🧵Here's part 2 of my Terrible Truths I've Learned About Humanity series, plz RT
They Not Like Us:
When Cruelty Becomes Contagious
Permission to Be Cruel
There’s a comforting myth that runs deep in American culture, especially among moderates and people who pride themselves on being reasonable.
It’s the belief that most people are naturally kind, that cruelty is fringe, and that if we just had better manners and calmer politics, things would sort themselves out. It’s a lovely idea. It’s also wrong.
The truth is that cruelty has a constituency. Not a majority, not even close, but a solid, persistent minority — roughly 10 to 20 percent — who exhibit stable personality traits that are callous, aggressive, or outright sadistic.
That sounds harsh, but the research is clear. Psychologists have spent years studying what they call the Dark Tetrad: narcissism, Machiavellianism, psychopathy, and sadism. Put these together and you get the personality profiles most strongly associated with enjoying the suffering of others.
🧵STATS You Should Know:
The Midterm Effect is Coming
Folks, if you’ve been wondering whether the “midterm effect” is actually lining up behind all the blue wins we just had, the answer from the data is: yes.
Three fresh national polls — Marist (for NPR/PBS), AP-NORC, and Reuters/Ipsos — are all telling the same basic story:
The environment is turning hostile for Trump and the GOP.
The public is screaming “prices, prices, prices” as the top issue.
Trump’s grip on Republicans is still strong but no longer ironclad.
And yet, voters still don’t trust the parties or institutions, and they’re perfectly willing to blame Democrats for pain they experience, even in a Trump-engineered crisis.
Let’s walk through what these polls collectively tell us.
The Generic Ballot: This Is 2018-Level Energy, But Earlier
Start with the headline: in the new NPR/PBS/Marist poll, Democrats lead the 2026 generic House ballot 55/41 among registered voters — a D+14 advantage. That’s the biggest Marist has shown for Democrats since 2017 and a massive swing from a 48–48 tie in November 2024.
🧵Reality Bites:
Trump’s Voters Have Just Found Out They’re on the Menu
When the government reopened, cable pundits called it a cave. Twitter called it surrender. I called it a win—because from where I sit, Democrats didn’t lose the shutdown fight, they won the long game and gave the ACA its only chance of survival.
The point was never to “hold out” for an Affordable Care Act subsidy extension that Republicans were never going to give in the shutdown. The point was to force them to take ownership of killing it. That’s exactly what just happened.
Now, as December premiums land in mailboxes across America, voters will have one party to blame for the sticker shock. One man, really—Donald J. Trump—and the Republican Party that spent fifteen years promising to repeal and replace the ACA without ever producing a plan that wasn’t a dumpster fire. They voted to gut it once to end the shutdown, and they’ll have to do it again in the glare of public outrage. That’s not losing; that’s setting a trap.