Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Break the Cycle (rough draft)

 

Break the Cycle

He was thirty-seven, engaged, and allegedly fine.

“Allegedly” because, over wine one night, Mara leaned across the table and said, not unkindly, “I love you, but you’re not… here. You’re a million miles away half the time.”

“I’m right here,” he’d protested, tapping the table.

She shook her head. “Physically, sure. Emotionally? Radio silence. I think you need to become more self-aware. More present. Maybe talk to someone.”

He laughed it off. Then spent three nights awake, feeling something that might have been dread or indigestion, and finally bought a copy of Psychology Today at the corner bodega like a man buying contraband.

The ad almost found him on its own.

SHORT-TERM THERAPY / PSYCHOEDUCATION
Learn to identify, articulate, and own your feelings in precision work including:
affect labeling, guided imagery, controlled exposure to internal states.
Overcome emotional avoidance. Gain clarity. Break the cycle.

He stared at the phrase precision work until the letters blurred.
Short-term. Psychoeducation. Break the cycle.

Mara wanted him more self-aware. This—he told himself—was him trying.

He circled the ad twice.


Protocol 1: The Rock

The office was smaller than he expected. No couch, just two chairs, a plant that looked surprisingly alive, and a framed print of a mountain range that might have been Switzerland or stock photography.

She was already seated when he arrived. Mid-40s, calm eyes, a mild smile.

“Short-term therapy,” she said, after he’d stumbled through his reasons. “Psychoeducation. Precision work around feelings. That’s what you’re hoping for?”

“Yeah. I feel stuck,” he said. “Mara says I’m distant.”

“Stuck,” she repeated. “Close, but I’d call that avoidance. Let’s see if we can stay with what’s underneath. I’d like to try a guided imagery exercise with you. Okay?”

He nodded, because that seemed like the correct behavior.

She asked him to close his eyes and picture himself at the base of a hill.

“There is a rock,” she said. “About the size of a backpack. Heavy, but liftable. You pick it up and carry it up the hill to me. I’m waiting at the top.”

He could see it: the rock, the hill, her silhouette at the crest.
His arms tensed around nothing.

“Walk,” she said softly. “Bring the weight to me. Don’t drop it, don’t rush it. Stay with the feeling in your body. That’s unprocessed affect.”

He imagined trudging. In his mind, it took a few minutes, maybe less.

“Good,” she murmured. “You made it. Now I’m rolling the rock back down. Watch it. There it goes.”

He watched. In the image, the rock clattered away from him, sounding heavier than it had felt to carry.

“Now you go down and get it. Let’s try again. This time, the rock is a little heavier. Notice that.”

The second climb took longer. His shoulders hurt, though they were resting on the arms of a chair in a small office.

“Good,” she said again, same tone. “I’m rolling it down.”

By the third, the rock had doubled in size and his imaginings had begun to lag. Time stretched, each step separate, deliberate.

“Stay with it,” she said. “You’re learning to tolerate difficult, unnamed emotion. Patience with what you’ve always dropped.”

He felt his jaw clench.

On the fifth repetition, the hill extended. She didn’t say how, exactly. She just noted, “The distance is a little longer this time. You’ve carried this feeling for years. See if you can stay with the weight.”

He tried to tell himself it was an exercise. His legs felt tight anyway.

“How far is it?” he asked, eyes still closed.

“Longer than before,” she said. “That’s what matters. Don’t distract yourself. Just carry.”

By the seventh climb the hill had become, without comment, a road. Then a coast. Then, when she next spoke, “You’ve been carrying this for miles. Decades. This is your interior life. Notice how impossible it feels, and keep going.”

His body responded like someone who’d actually been walking: a subtle tremor in his calves, a twitch in his fingers, a hollow ache in his chest.

“Good,” she said, as he imagined arriving at some unseen summit. “You stayed with it. That’s progress.”

He opened his eyes, drained, surprised to find himself still in a static chair.

“How long was that?” he asked, throat dry.

She glanced at the clock. “Forty minutes.”

He stared. Forty minutes, and in his chest, it felt like years.

“Short-term work,” she assured him. “You’re learning patience with your internal weight. Next time, we may increase the distance a little.”

As he left, his stride felt off by half a second, like he was walking with something heavier than his own body.


Protocol 2: Almost

The second session was scheduled two weeks later. He felt oddly relieved when her text confirmed the date—like a rock briefly set down.

“I want to look at how you handle not getting your way,” she said, once they’d settled in. “Life’s disappointments, blocked gratification. Sound relevant?”

He thought of half-finished conversations with Mara, jobs he hadn’t applied for, the way he avoided certain phone calls.

“Yeah,” he said. “I guess.”

She smiled. “We’ll do a simple exercise. I’ll bring you to the brink of something wanted, then stop. Your task is to notice the frustration and stay with it without scrambling to fix it. Ready?”

He swallowed. “Okay.”

They built it slowly. That first week, the thing “wanted” was vague—a sense of relief at finishing a difficult story he was telling about his childhood. She guided him there with questions, then glanced at the clock and said, “We’ll have to stop there. Let’s leave it as is.”

He walked out, unsettled but tentatively proud: he had not demanded an answer, not begged for more time.

The second time, the spacing shifted. Three weeks. She texted, last minute, to confirm.

“I’d like you to picture something closer,” she said in that session. “Something you really want that feels almost in reach. Maybe Mara. Maybe the feeling of being understood. Hold it right at the edge.”

He chose, quietly, the image of Mara’s face when she smiled like he’d done something right. He brought it close enough to almost touch.

“That’s it,” she said. “Stay with that edge. Notice the urge to grab it. Don’t move.”

His chest tightened. The urge was almost physical.

“Okay,” she said suddenly, glancing at the clock. “We’ll stop here for today. You did well with your frustrated desire.”

He sat there, every muscle expecting an extension, time spilling forward where she saw a boundary.

“That’s… it?” he asked.

“For now,” she said. “Between now and next time, just notice when you’re almost getting what you want and don’t. Be curious. Let yourself hang there a little.”

The next time was five weeks out.

In between, he found himself catching that moment constantly: hand reaching for Mara, her phone ringing to drag her away; a project nearly finished when his boss shifted priorities; a friend half-promising to meet and never texting back. Each moment stopped at the brink, and instead of moving on, he lingered there, as instructed.

The third session built the edge sharper. She had him imagine her promising a crucial piece of feedback, some final “insight” about who he was and why he sabotaged things.

“You’re right there,” she said. “You can almost hear it. Feel that?”

He nodded, fists tight.

“Good,” she said. “Let’s end here.”

He stared at her.

“I thought—”

“You tolerated that beautifully,” she said. “You didn’t demand closure. That’s acceptance work.”

His heart kept waiting anyway.

At the end of the session, she didn’t offer a date.

“I’ll text or call about next time,” she said, straightening the papers on her lap. “I want to space it out a bit more. Let you sit with the not-knowing.”

He nodded, trying to look therapeutic, not desperate.

He spent that evening refreshing his messages, then the next day, then three weeks. Each notification triggered the same physiological spike—expectation with no object.

Her call never came.

Some nights, lying beside Mara, his body felt tuned to a frequency of almost: almost asleep, almost comforted, almost reassured. Always waiting for something slightly out of reach.

When Mara asked what was wrong, he said, “I think I’m learning to accept not getting my way.”

She looked at him like he was describing a car accident as “road practice.”


Protocol 3: Name and Tame

When, after two months of silence, he finally messaged to ask whether they were still working together, she responded with a brief: Yes. We’ll do one more round. Come in next Thursday at 3.

He arrived with his jaw already aching.

“This one is about clarity,” she said. “Naming what you feel with precision. You said you feel ‘stuck.’ Let’s refine that.”

He sat forward. “I feel stuck,” he repeated.

She tilted her head. “Close, but not quite palpable. I’m hearing avoidance. Why are you stuck?”

He frowned. “I’m not sure. I just feel—”

“Mmm. I’m hearing anger behind that,” she said. “Can you feel it? Try saying, ‘I feel angry.’”

He hesitated, then tried it on. “I feel angry.”

“How is that different from ‘stuck’?” she asked gently.

“It’s… sharper,” he admitted. “More… real.”

“Good,” she said. “Let’s keep going.”

Over the next forty minutes, she adjusted the words by degrees, always in the same pattern: his vague term, her refinement, his reluctant adoption, his gradual conviction.

“I feel sad.”
“Sad is broad. I’m hearing heartache. Try that.”

“I feel heartache,” he said, and felt something twist in his chest to fit the word.

“I feel frustrated.”
“Frustrated is surface-level. I’m hearing futility. It’s like carrying that rock for miles and realizing the hill never ends.”

He swallowed. “I feel futility.”

It went on.

“I feel dependent on Mara.”
“Dependent is soft. I’m hearing dependant, as in someone you’re holding up emotionally. Say, ‘I feel like a dependant.’”

He didn’t notice the typo in the word. He noticed the flood behind it.

“I feel jealous.”
“Jealousy is part of it, but I’m hearing resentment. You resent her for asking you to change.”

He repeated it, slow: “I resent her.”

Each substitution landed like a stamp; his body adjusted to match.

“Notice what happens,” she said, watching him. “When you use the precise word.”

“I feel… more real,” he said. “Like I see what I’ve always been, instead of pretending.”

“Exactly,” she said. “You’re breaking the cycle of vague avoidance.”

The session ended without ceremony. No summary, no “this is what we’ve done.” Just the quiet closing of her notebook and the soft reminder that she would “be in touch about next steps.”

On the way home, he rehearsed his new vocabulary silently, like conjugations in a foreign language.

Heartache. Futility. Resentment. Dependant. Jealousy. Forsaken.

By the time he reached his building, his shoulders were twitching with a phantom weight and his thoughts had the smooth, confident tone of a brochure delivered door to door.


The Breakup

Mara waited until he was sitting.
He was already half-turned toward the door, as if bracing for a load that wasn’t there.

“You don’t seem like yourself lately,” she said.

“That’s inaccurate,” he replied. “I’m accessing previously avoided resentment.”

She blinked.

His copy of Psychology Today lay open on the coffee table, an ad circled twice, the page worn at the edges from being touched.

“I mean you’re… tense,” she said. “Always waiting for something.”

“That’s expectation work,” he said. “I’m practicing staying with wanting and not getting.”

“You stare at your phone all night.”

“That’s part of the protocol. I’m learning to inhabit the build-up without relief.”

She laughed once, dryly, then stopped when he didn’t.

“I just wanted you to be more present,” she said. “More honest about your feelings.”

“I am,” he said earnestly. “I can identify heartache, futility, jealousy, and dependent longing with much more clarity now.”

She stared at him.

“You sound like a deranged brochure,” she said.

“It’s called psychoeducation,” he says gently.

She looked at his hands. His fingers twitched, pinching some invisible edge, like he was still balancing the rock.

“When I touch you, you flinch,” she said.

“That’s just the body remembering the exercise,” he replied. “It means it worked.”

“No,” she said softly. “It means you’re miserable.”

“Miserable is too vague,” he said. “It’s more like… sustained futility with spikes of jealousy.”

He sounded faintly proud, like he’d finally gotten the answer right on a test.

“This was supposed to help us,” she said.

“It did,” he answered. “I can see now that you’re central to my resentment pattern.”

“Jesus.”

“That’s not a blame statement,” he added quickly. “It’s descriptive.”

She wrapped her arms around herself.

“I don’t want to be your ‘pattern,’” she said. “I wanted to be your partner.”

“Partners co-create avoidance,” he said. “The modality helped me see that.”

“So what does that mean… for us?” she asked.

“It means you’re stepping out of the role,” he said.

She squinted at him.

“I’m breaking up with you,” she said.

“Yeah,” he said after a beat. “That fits.”

“Is that all you have to say?” she asked.

“I wish you well,” he said. He paused. “From a distance.”

She swallowed.

“Do you even care that I’m leaving?” she asked.

“Care is fuzzy,” he said. “I feel a mix of heartache and clarified resentment.”

She picked up her bag. He watched the movement with the distant attention of someone observing a test run.

“You don’t seem sad,” she said.

“Sadness is pre-treatment language,” he said.

She moved to the door, then paused.

“You said you wanted something short-term,” she said. “Remember?”

“Yes. ‘Brief psychoeducational protocol,’” he said.

“It wasn’t,” she said.

“It still isn’t,” he replied. “I’m waiting for her to schedule the next session.”

“She’s not calling,” Mara said.

“That’s part of the work,” he said.

“No,” she said. “That’s just… abandonment.”

“Exactly,” he said, and gave a small, strained smile, like he was proud of naming it correctly.

“I hope someday you get yourself back,” she said quietly.

“I think this is who I am now,” he said.

She stepped into the hall.

His hand was already reaching for his phone, checking for a notification that wasn’t there, jaw ticking with the tiny, invisible movement of someone readjusting a load on his shoulders.


Break the Cycle

Weeks later, alone now, he sat in a coffee shop with a half-eaten sandwich and a jitter in his leg that wouldn’t leave.

He’d stopped expecting the therapist’s call, or told himself he had. Still, every vibration from his phone sent a small flash through his chest—anticipation without object.

There was a newspaper by the sugar packets. Someone had left it folded open.

He reached for it, more to occupy his hands than his mind, and his eyes slid down the page.

SHORT-TERM THERAPY / EMOTIONAL PRECISION WORK
Learn to identify, articulate, and own your feelings in precision exercises:
affect labeling, guided imagery, controlled exposure to internal states.
Overcome emotional avoidance. Gain clarity. Break the cycle.

He frowned.

The wording sparked something under his skin, like static. Affect labeling, guided imagery, controlled exposure. Precision exercises. Overcome avoidance. Gain clarity.

His jaw twitched.

The name under the ad was not hers. Different therapist. Different address.
Same font. Same order. Same promise.

Same typo in the word dependant—sitting there like a small, familiar scar.

He stared a moment longer than normal, then told himself he was being dramatic. Practices probably shared language. Modality, whatever. That was just how the field worked now. Protocols, manuals, standardized scripts.

His pencil hovered over the page.

He felt a heaviness in his arms, like he’d picked something up again.

Slowly, almost gently, he circled the ad.

“Clarity,” he murmured, as his finger traced the words like a mantra. “Control. Clarity. Control.”

Outside, the city moved on: people carrying visible bags and invisible weights up hills no one had named.

The ad’s tagline, in small print, sat just beneath the therapist’s credentials:

Break the cycle.

He stared at it, feeling something tighten and then smooth out inside his chest.

Then he folded the paper, slipped it into his bag, and finished his sandwich, already planning his next short-term work.

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

When Democracy Damages Itself (Draft 3)

When Democracy Damages Itself

A Theory of Political Craters

Why the next election won't fix what has been broken — and what honest recovery actually requires

The Senate's War Powers vote this week tells you everything you need to know about the political system we now inhabit. On Tuesday, June 23, four Republican senators crossed party lines to join Democrats in passing a bipartisan resolution directing President Trump to end unauthorized military operations in Iran — the first time both chambers of Congress had passed such a resolution since 1973. A genuine constitutional moment. By Wednesday night, after Trump traveled to the Capitol, screamed at the offending senators, called Bill Cassidy a lunatic, and threatened political annihilation, the same chamber reversed itself. The resolution died 50-47.

Senator Cassidy, who had already lost his Louisiana primary — a man with nothing left to lose electorally — still flipped. That detail deserves to sit with you for a moment.

What we witnessed was not political chaos or inconsistency. It was the system working exactly as a personalist regime is designed to work. The first vote was a brief spasm of institutional memory. The second vote was the regime reasserting dominance. Understanding why this is the new normal — and what it means for American democracy going forward — requires a different set of concepts than most political commentary has been willing to supply.


The Wrong Question

The dominant frame in mainstream political commentary treats Trumpism as an aberration — a fever that will break, a norm violation that will eventually self-correct, a crisis that the institutional guardrails of American democracy will ultimately contain. The question asked is always some version of: when will things go back to normal?

This is the wrong question. Not because democratic recovery is impossible, but because it mistakes the nature of the damage. Democracy in America has not caught a cold. It has sustained a series of structural injuries — legal, institutional, bureaucratic, historical — that no single election, and no automatic process of institutional self-correction, can simply undo. Before we can think seriously about recovery, we need to be honest about what has actually been broken, and what broken means in each case.

Not all damage is the same. Some things are gone forever. Some things would take a generation to rebuild. Some things are theoretically reversible but practically consolidated for decades. Treating all of them as equivalent — or worse, assuming they will all snap back on their own — is not optimism. It is a failure of political analysis that leaves us strategically blind.


New Baselines: Acts That Rewrite the Starting Point

The category of damage that receives least attention in political commentary is perhaps the most uncomfortable: some acts and decisions create new baselines from which all subsequent political action must proceed. They do not merely cause harm. They rewrite the starting conditions for everything that follows. No future administration, no diplomatic initiative, no legislative reversal changes them — because the world that would have existed without them no longer exists to return to.

The senior Iranian leadership echelon killed in the course of the current conflict is dead. No future administration changes that fact or the political configurations those deaths have permanently altered. The head of state removed in Venezuela is gone. Whatever follows in that region will be built on those facts, not around them.

Gaza — if genocide occurred, and the legal case before international tribunals is substantial — represents the starkest example. No future aid policy, no change in American diplomatic posture, undoes it. The obligation that follows is prospective accountability, not retroactive reversal. The people who died when USAID's medical supply chains collapsed after the agency's dismantlement: gone. The communities in fragile states that lost food assistance, vaccination programs, and public health infrastructure: permanently altered.

These events also establish precedents — a second form of new baseline. The 2024 presidential immunity ruling did not merely protect one president. It rewrote the rules under which all future presidents operate. The "Hamas adjacency" deportation theory applied to Mahmoud Khalil did not merely remove one person. It established that protected political speech can constitute grounds for revoking lawful permanent residency — a precedent available to any future administration against any inconvenient non-citizen dissenter.

These new baselines set the actual starting conditions for any future reconstruction — not the world as it was, but the world as it now is.


Institutional Craters: Practically Gone

USAID is the paradigm case of a different category — institutional damage so severe that formal legal restoration would be hollow.

What made USAID function was not its budget line or its legal authority. It was decades of accumulated human and social capital: institutional memory, field relationships, NGO partnerships, country-specific expertise, logistics networks built through years of operational experience. A future Congress could pass a USAID Restoration Act tomorrow. What it would be funding is essentially a startup — beginning from near-zero, in a hostile political environment, without the professionals who have retired, dispersed, or moved to private sector roles, without the partner networks which have atrophied, pivoted, or been replaced by other actors, and against a rhetorical landscape in which "globalist foreign aid waste" has been successfully baked into the expectations of a significant portion of the electorate.

You can build something like USAID eventually. You cannot restore USAID. The distinction matters enormously for anyone serious about what reconstruction actually entails.

The same logic applies, with variations in degree, to the State Department's career diplomatic corps, the EPA's scientific staff, the NIH and NSF grant networks, the university research infrastructure currently being defunded, and the public health logistics weakened by a decade of political assault. These are not policy preferences that can be reversed by executive order. They are institutions whose value resided in accumulated human expertise and relational networks — and those do not survive a forced dispersal intact.


The ICE/DHS Machinery: Bureaucratic Inertia at Scale

This is where the abstract theory meets concrete arithmetic — and the numbers are staggering.

Through two pieces of legislation — the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 and the Secure America Act, signed June 10, 2026 — Congress has routed close to a quarter of a trillion dollars to the Department of Homeland Security in under a year, nearly all of it for immigration enforcement, with all funds legally obligated through September 30, 2029. OBBBA alone provided roughly $170 billion, including $45 billion earmarked solely for detention capacity. The Secure America Act added approximately $70 billion more, with the breakdown running $38 billion to ICE, $26 billion to CBP, $5 billion in flexible DHS funds, and $350 million specifically for local law enforcement agencies that coordinate with ICE.

What that money is building is not a policy preference but a physical and contractual footprint being poured into place right now. ICE's Detention Reengineering Initiative — laid out in internal planning documents released in February 2026 and reported by the American Immigration Council and the Washington Post — calls for eight large-scale detention centers holding 7,000–10,000 people each, sixteen regional processing centers, and ten converted turnkey facilities. As of early 2026, ICE had already spent over $700 million acquiring warehouses toward this plan, running the procurement through the Navy's purchasing system to bypass normal competitive bidding and pre-qualifying private operators like the GEO Group to move fast.

This is not a policy preference. By 2029, this is physical reality — concrete, steel, signed contracts, hired personnel on federal career tracks with pensions and union protections, private contractor profit streams with political lobbying power, and hundreds of local jurisdictions that have oriented their own budgets and staffing around federal coordination money.

A future administration cannot simply not spend money already legally obligated in contracts. It cannot fire federal law enforcement officers by executive order. It cannot break multi-year private contracts without paying termination penalties. It cannot withdraw from local partnership agreements without generating opposition from hundreds of sheriffs and police chiefs across the country who have built their own budgets around federal coordination funds.

The progressives who won New York primaries this week on "Abolish ICE" platforms are making a sincere moral claim about genuine cruelty. But as a programmatic promise, they will encounter not a policy preference but a civilizational-scale bureaucratic and financial commitment. The honest question is not How do we abolish ICE? It is How do we begin to reduce the scale and cruelty of this, incrementally, over many years, against organized resistance from every direction? That is a harder question. It is also the real one.


Some of the most consequential damage has been done through the courts, and this category requires careful handling because it is genuinely distinct from the others. Legal decisions can be reversed — Roe v. Wade's overturning in 2022 proves that even 49-year-old precedents are not permanent. So the damage here is not ontologically irreversible.

But theoretically reversible is doing enormous work in that sentence. Consider what reversal actually requires.

The Supreme Court's 2025 Trump v. CASA decision — ruling 6–3 that federal district courts cannot issue nationwide injunctions against executive orders — transformed presidential EOs into effective diktats. Before CASA, a single federal judge anywhere in the country could halt an unconstitutional order nationwide while litigation proceeded. After CASA, an injunction applies only to named plaintiffs; the policy remains active and enforceable everywhere else while years of appeals grind forward. By the time a case reaches the Supreme Court for final resolution, the policy has been on the ground, restructuring reality, for years.

Reversing CASA requires a future Supreme Court majority with both the composition and the will to do so. The current majority was shaped by appointments that run through the 2030s and 2040s. It will not be this Court. It will not be 2028 or 2032. It is, at minimum, a generational project — and that assumes the political infrastructure to pursue it even exists, which is not guaranteed.

The same analysis applies to the 2024 presidential immunity ruling — Trump v. United States — which granted absolute immunity for core official acts including all DOJ directives, and effectively insulated the weaponization of federal law enforcement from legal challenge. The ruling creates a further paradox: unofficial acts are nominally subject to challenge, but any challenge that risks intruding on the authority and functions of the executive branch is barred from using official evidence to prosecute them. It gives with the right hand what it takes back with the left. And to Schedule F, which reclassified tens of thousands of career civil servants as at-will political appointees. And to the maximalist Unitary Executive doctrine, under which the president claims total, unreviewable control over the entire executive branch.

Roe took 49 years and a systematic, multi-decade legal and political project to overturn. The timeline for reversing this cluster of decisions is not shorter.


The Bipartisan Apparatus: A Crater in Civil Rights Law

In March 2025, the Trump administration revoked $400 million in federal funding from Columbia University. The same weekend, plainclothes ICE agents arrested Mahmoud Khalil — a Columbia graduate student, lawful permanent resident, protest organizer — on the legal theory that his political speech threatened U.S. foreign policy. No criminal charge. No evidence of any crime. Trump announced it was "the first arrest of many to come." A federal judge later found that Secretary Rubio had "likely violated the Constitution" in ordering Khalil's deportation. When courts proved inconvenient, DHS pivoted to an administrative pretext: Khalil had failed to disclose a student internship with UNRWA — a United Nations agency — on his green card application. A UN internship became a de facto terrorist affiliation. Neither case was improvised. The apparatus that made them legally possible had been assembled, bipartisanly, over six years.

The foundation was laid incrementally. The Bush administration established that Title VI's national origin protections cover Jewish students. Trump's 2019 executive order operationalized the IHRA definition of antisemitism across federal agencies without yet activating enforcement. Biden's May 2023 National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism embedded IHRA as the operational standard across eight agencies; the Second Gentleman's task force, aligned with the ADL and the Brandeis Center, drove the policy inside the White House. The OCR opened approximately 60 formal Title VI investigations into named universities. The apparatus was fully assembled before October 7.

What activated it required three legal innovations, none of which changed the law on paper. First, the Zionism-as-identity conversion: advocacy groups successfully argued that Zionism is an inherent component of Jewish ancestral identity, transforming political criticism of Israeli state policy into national origin discrimination under Title VI — converting a political position into a protected civil rights category by administrative interpretation, below the threshold of judicial review. Second, the subjective-to-objective laundering: the Davis v. Monroe standard required objective denial of educational access; OCR accepted students avoiding campus spaces and reporting psychological distress as that objective proof, repackaging felt discomfort as a measurable civil rights harm. Third, congressional pre-adjudication: the December 2023 Stefanik hearings generated formal findings of "deliberate indifference" — the precise Davis threshold for institutional liability — which were handed to OCR as evidentiary records. The presidents' First Amendment defenses became proof of complicity. No court adjudicated any of it. The judicial guardrail was bypassed entirely.

The slogans — "From the River to the Sea," "Globalize the Intifada" — became the primary evidence. Not physical assaults. Not individual targeting. Words that were protected political speech before October 7 and remain technically protected on the books today. University presidents lost their jobs for defending them on First Amendment grounds. Students were penalized. Professors investigated for their syllabi. The word "antisemitism" tars over the crater: by fusing the unambiguous prohibition on harassing Jewish individuals for being Jewish — always illegal, never in dispute — with the unprecedented penalization of political speech critical of a foreign government, the apparatus became nearly unchallengeable. To question the framework is to appear to defend antisemitism.

The terrorism-adjacency framing that made deportation legally legible was normalized, like so much else in this story, by a Democrat. On April 30, 2024, flanked by NYPD brass, Mayor Eric Adams held a nationally televised briefing claiming Columbia's encampment had been "co-opted by professional outside agitators" with ties to terrorism — citing as his evidence the fact that one protester's husband had once faced federal terrorism charges. The claims were immediately disputed and largely unsubstantiated. They served their purpose regardless: that night the NYPD cleared Hamilton Hall and arrested approximately 300 protesters at Columbia and CCNY. Governor Shapiro made parallel claims in Pennsylvania, comparing campus protesters to the KKK. The Heritage Foundation's Project Esther then codified the casual rhetoric into a comprehensive legal theory: the entire American pro-Palestinian movement — SJP, JVP, progressive legal networks — was a functional domestic proxy for Hamas, to be targeted via counter-terrorism statutes, RICO, and immigration enforcement. When Trump took office, ICE Tiger Teams operationalized the blueprint, building deportation target lists partly from Canary Mission, a private anonymous doxxing platform with no legal accountability and no due process obligations whatsoever.

Trump inherited approximately 60 open OCR case files. The proof of inheritance is the velocity: Columbia's defunding came in weeks, not months. He executed what Biden had made possible, then widened the aperture — layering Title IX DEI enforcement onto the existing Title VI machinery, converting the Hamas-adjacency framing from Democratic mayoral press conferences into grounds for revoking the green cards of permanent residents who had engaged in protected political speech. Columbia lost hundreds of millions in research funding mid-study; Harvard's challenge to its own funding freeze remains in federal court. Other universities, having watched Columbia, began complying before the subpoenas arrived.

The asymmetry that results is a factual description, not an argument: you may burn an American flag, call for boycotts of American companies, describe American foreign policy in any terms you choose. Organizing a campus boycott of Israel, chanting a slogan whose meaning is genuinely contested among Jewish scholars, or writing academic criticism of Israeli state policy now carries Title VI exposure, potential defunding, possible termination, and for non-citizens, deportation on administrative pretexts invented after the arrest. That differential is the structure of the apparatus.

The precedent is what makes this a crater rather than a policy dispute. The template is now established and available to any future administration: embed a contested definitional expansion at the administrative level below judicial review; use congressional performance to generate prosecutorial predicate without adjudication; convert the chilling effect into institutional compliance before the constitutional question is decided; when courts intervene, find the administrative side door. The First Amendment text is intact. The operational reality beneath it has been structurally altered. That is what a tarred-over crater looks like — the surface holds, and the damage accumulates underneath.


The Personalist Regime: How It Works

Underlying all of this structural change is a transformation in the style of political power that deserves to be named clearly: Trump 2.0 is a personalist regime, not merely an aggressive presidency.

The distinction matters. Richard Nixon was paranoid and retaliatory, but he operated within a party that could ultimately override him. When Nixon's conduct threatened the Republican Party as an institution, senior senators marched into the Oval Office and told him he had to go. The party protected itself from the leader. Under Trump 2.0, the party and the leader have completely merged. The RNC functions as an enforcement arm for personal mandates. Defying Trump is not a policy disagreement — it is treated as betrayal of the party itself.

Nixon's aggression was also largely covert: enemies lists in desk drawers, wiretaps hidden behind executive deniability. Trump's discipline is intentionally public. Screaming at senators in a closed-door luncheon, calling them lunatics to their faces, blasting them on social media within the hour — this is not loss of control. It is a calculated deterrent. Every Republican watching knows exactly what happens to the next person who steps out of line.

And crucially: under Nixon, policy disagreement was tolerated. Nixon signed the EPA into existence. His senators could oppose him on civil rights legislation without fearing annihilation. Under Trump 2.0, ideological consistency is irrelevant. Thomas Massie was one of the most conservative members of Congress by any voting record. Bill Cassidy had been a reliable Republican for decades. Neither mattered. What matters in a personalist regime is daily, transactional personal fealty — and the moment it lapses, the entire history of loyalty is erased.

The legal architecture has been constructed to make this style of rule effectively unchallengeable. Presidential immunity shields the leader personally from criminal and civil accountability. CASA shields his executive orders from lower-court injunction. A compliant Congress provides political cover. And the DOJ, under absolute presidential immunity for all directives to it, functions as a sword against opponents while the leader himself is insulated from any return fire.


The Ratchet That Only Turns One Way

There is one further dimension that receives insufficient attention: this apparatus does not disappear when Trump leaves office.

When one faction expands presidential power to achieve its political goals, the opposing faction does not voluntarily surrender those powers upon winning the White House. It inherits them. It uses them. This is not a partisan accusation — it is how institutional power works. Biden retained Trump's Golan Heights declaration. He used Title VI enforcement in ways his Republican predecessor pioneered, then built the OCR machinery further. He continued military aid to Israel while his own diplomats resigned rather than participate in documenting what their professional obligations required them to see.

A future Democratic president will inherit: absolute immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts; a DOJ that can be directed against political opponents without legal challenge; an executive branch purged of Schedule F employees and restaffed with loyalists; CASA as settled law eliminating the most effective tool for challenging unconstitutional orders; and an immigration enforcement apparatus funded through 2029 with nearly a quarter of a trillion dollars in obligated spending. The president who inherits these tools and faces a genuine crisis — a major immigration emergency, a foreign policy confrontation, a domestic political threat — will face enormous pressure to use them. The tools are there. The legal architecture supports their use. The institutional constraints against using them have been systematically dismantled.

This is how structural authoritarianism becomes durable: not necessarily through a single autocrat who holds power indefinitely, but through a ratchet effect in which each administration adds to the arsenal and none voluntarily subtracts from it.


What Recovery Actually Means

None of this means democratic recovery is impossible. There is no determinism here. Ideological trends are genuinely fluid. Political coalitions realign. Crises open unexpected possibilities. A pro-democracy movement gaining traction in the 2030s is not fanciful.

But let us be honest about what that movement would actually be doing. It would not be restoring a pre-existing condition, the way you recover from a cold and return to normal. It would be building something new, from inside a world fundamentally altered by everything described above. The status quo ante of 2015 is not waiting to be retrieved. And even if it were, it was already a system producing the conditions for Trumpism — so retrieving it would not be much of a victory.

A democratic recovery movement in the 2030s would be working with: CASA as constitutional law; Schedule F as administrative reality; nearly a quarter of a trillion dollars in immigration enforcement infrastructure as physical fact; a weakened and atrophied Congress conditioned to deference; executive immunity as the legal environment for any challenge; a university research system whose independence has been structurally compromised; and a public that has spent a decade with the current system as its baseline expectation.

Any strategy that does not begin with this honest accounting — that speaks instead of "restoring democracy" as if it were a simple matter of winning enough elections — is not a strategy. It is a comfort narrative.

The real question is harder and more specific: Which craters can be addressed, by which means, on what timeline, by whom, against what organized resistance? For each one. Individually. With honest reckoning about the asymmetry between how easy it was to create the damage and how difficult it will be to address it.

That asymmetry — fast and cheap to destroy, slow and enormously costly to rebuild — is the central political fact of this moment. Naming it honestly is not pessimism. It is the precondition for any strategy serious enough to actually matter.


Topical Bibliography

I. Democratic Erosion, Backsliding, and Recovery

Cheeseman, Nic. "After Backsliding, Democracy Often Comes Back Weaker and More Fragile." NPR, January 31, 2026.

Fung, Archon, David Moss, and Odd Arne Westad, eds. When Democracy Breaks: Studies in Democratic Erosion and Collapse, from Ancient Athens to the Present Day. Oxford University Press, 2024.

Kleinfeld, Rachel, and David Solimini. After Degradation: A Roadmap for U.S. Democratic Repair. Toda Peace Institute, January 2026.

Levitsky, Steven, and Daniel Ziblatt. How Democracies Die. Crown, 2018.

Przeworski, Adam. Crises of Democracy. Cambridge University Press, 2019.

Brookings Institution. "Understanding Democratic Decline in the United States." June 2025.

II. The Personalist Regime and Executive Power

Trump v. United States, 603 U.S. _ (2024). Decided July 1, 2024. Presidential immunity for official acts.

Schedule F Executive Order (reimposed January 2025). Reclassification of career civil servants as at-will political appointees.

Trump v. CASA, Inc., Supreme Court of the United States. Decided June 27, 2025. 6–3 ruling limiting nationwide injunctions to named plaintiffs.

Georgetown Law, Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection. "CASA v. Trump (2025)." Case timeline and analysis.

Sidley Austin LLP. "Supreme Court Substantially Limits Universal Injunctions (Trump v. CASA)." July 2025.

IV. ICE/DHS Machinery and Detention Infrastructure

Secure America Act (S. 2), signed into law June 10, 2026. White House Briefing Statement.

ICE Detention Reengineering Initiative. Internal planning documents released February 13, 2026, via New Hampshire government. Reported by American Immigration Council and Washington Post.

American Immigration Council. "ICE Buys Warehouses: Immigration Detention and the New Procurement Model." 2026.

American Immigration Council. "What's in the Secure America Act?" Fact Sheet, June 2026.

National Immigration Law Center. "The Anti-Immigrant Policies in Trump's Final 'Big Beautiful Bill' Explained." 2025.

V. The Bipartisan Apparatus: Title VI, IHRA, and Campus Suppression

Biden, Joseph R. National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism. White House, May 2023.

Trump, Donald J. Executive Order 13899: "Combating Antisemitism." December 11, 2019.

Heritage Foundation. Project Esther: A National Strategy to Combat Antisemitism. October 2024.

New York Times. "Inside the Heritage Foundation's Plan to Crush the U.S. Pro-Palestinian Movement." May 18, 2025.

Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education, 526 U.S. 629 (1999). Supreme Court standard for peer harassment liability under Title IX/Title VI.

The Guardian. "US Judge Orders Mahmoud Khalil Deported Citing 'Misrepresented Facts' on Green Card Form." September 18, 2025.

NPR. "Judge Says Rubio 'Likely' Violated Constitution in Ordering Mahmoud Khalil Deported." May 28, 2025.

VI. New Baselines: Iran, Venezuela, Gaza

Operation Absolute Resolve (January 3, 2026). Capture and extradition of Nicolás Maduro. Associated Press, Reuters, New York Times, January 3–5, 2026.

U.S.-Israel joint strike on Iranian leadership, February 28, 2026. Reuters, AP, Washington Post.

International Court of Justice. Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide in the Gaza Strip (South Africa v. Israel). Provisional measures order, January 26, 2024.

Biden, Joseph R. Interview with Lawrence O'Donnell, MSNBC, January 17, 2025.

VII. The War Powers Ratchet and Congressional Abdication

U.S. Senate. War Powers Resolution on Iran. Passed 50–48, June 23, 2026; reversed procedurally 50–47, June 24, 2026. Reuters, NPR, CBS News

War Powers Resolution of 1973 (50 U.S.C. §§ 1541–1548).


Thursday, June 25, 2026

When Democracy Damages Itself (draft 1)

 

When Democracy Damages Itself: A Theory of Political Craters

Why the next election won't fix what has been broken—and what honest recovery actually requires


The Senate's War Powers vote this week tells you everything you need to know about the political system we now inhabit. On Tuesday, June 23, four Republican senators crossed party lines to join Democrats in passing a bipartisan resolution directing President Trump to end unauthorized military operations in Iran—the first time both chambers of Congress had passed such a resolution since 1973. A genuine constitutional moment. By Wednesday night, after Trump traveled to the Capitol, screamed at the offending senators, called Bill Cassidy a "lunatic," and threatened political annihilation, the same chamber reversed itself. The resolution died 47–50.

Senator Cassidy, who had already lost his Louisiana primary—a man with nothing left to lose electorally—still flipped. That detail deserves to sit with you for a moment.

What we witnessed was not political chaos or inconsistency. It was the system working exactly as a personalist regime is designed to work. The first vote was a brief spasm of institutional memory. The second vote was the regime reasserting dominance. Understanding why this is the new normal—and what it means for American democracy going forward—requires a different set of concepts than most political commentary has been willing to supply.



The Wrong Question

The dominant frame in mainstream political commentary treats Trumpism as an aberration—a fever that will break, a norm violation that will eventually self-correct, a crisis that the institutional "guardrails" of American democracy will ultimately contain. The question asked is always some version of: when will things go back to normal?

This is the wrong question. Not because democratic recovery is impossible, but because it mistakes the nature of the damage. Democracy in America has not caught a cold. It has sustained a series of structural injuries—legal, institutional, bureaucratic, historical—that no single election, and no automatic process of institutional self-correction, can simply undo. Before we can think seriously about recovery, we need to be honest about what has actually been broken, and what "broken" means in each case.

Not all damage is the same. Some things are gone forever. Some things would take a generation to rebuild. Some things are theoretically reversible but practically consolidated for decades. Treating all of them as equivalent—or worse, assuming they will all snap back on their own—is not optimism. It is a failure of political analysis that leaves us strategically blind.


A Taxonomy of Democratic Damage

Historical Facts: Gone

The strictest category of irreversibility is the one that gets least attention in political commentary, perhaps because it is the most uncomfortable: historical facts cannot be undone. They are not policy. They belong to a different ontological register entirely.

The senior Iranian leadership echelon killed in the course of the current conflict is dead. No future administration, no diplomatic initiative, no UN resolution changes that fact or the political configurations those deaths have permanently altered. The head of state removed in Venezuela is gone; the attack occurred; the people killed are dead. Whatever follows in that region will be built on those facts, not around them.

Gaza: if genocide occurred—and the legal case before international tribunals is substantial—no future aid policy, no change in American diplomatic posture, undoes it. The obligation that follows is prospective accountability, not retroactive reversal.

The people who died when USAID's medical supply chains collapsed after the agency's dismantlement: gone. The communities in fragile states that lost food assistance, vaccination programs, and public health infrastructure: permanently altered.

Historical facts set the permanent floor of any future reconstruction. Acknowledging this is not despair. It is the minimum required honesty about what any future political movement will actually be working with.

Institutional Craters: Practically Gone

USAID is the paradigm case of a different category: institutional damage so severe that formal legal restoration would be hollow.

What made USAID function was not its budget line or its legal authority. It was decades of accumulated human social capital: institutional memory, field relationships, NGO partnerships, country-specific expertise, logistics networks built through years of operational experience. A future Congress could pass a "USAID Restoration Act" tomorrow. What it would be funding is essentially a startup—beginning from near-zero, in a hostile political environment, without the professionals (who have retired, dispersed, or moved to private sector roles), without the partner networks (which have atrophied, pivoted, or been replaced by other actors), and against a rhetorical landscape in which "globalist foreign aid waste" has been successfully baked into the expectations of a significant portion of the electorate.

You can build something like USAID eventually. You cannot restore USAID. The distinction matters enormously for anyone serious about what reconstruction actually entails.

The same logic applies, with variations in degree, to the State Department's career diplomatic corps, the EPA's scientific staff, the NIH and NSF grant networks, the university research infrastructure currently being defunded, and the public health logistics weakened by a decade of political assault.

 

The Bipartisan Construction: How Foreign Policy Made Domestic Repression

The most instructive illustration of how craters get built across party lines has a specific and documented origin point.

Eight days after October 7, 2023, President Biden traveled to Israel and committed U.S. support. In a subsequent interview with MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell—now submitted as evidence in proceedings before the International Court of Justice—Biden described what he told Netanyahu in that meeting:

"BB, you can't be carpet bombing these communities... You can't indiscriminately bomb civilian areas, even if the bad guys are there. Even the bad guys there, you can't take out 2, 1,012, 1,500 people, innocent people, in order to get the one bad guy. That's why we came up with the UN—new deals by which what we do relative to civilians and military."

Biden was invoking the post-WWII Geneva Convention framework by name, describing Israeli operations as carpet bombing civilian areas, and explaining precisely why such tactics are impermissible under the international legal architecture he personally cited. He then continued weapons supply—including heavy munitions—for fifteen more months, as the death toll mounted to include over 20,000 children by the June 2026 independent UN inquiry's count.

International law scholar William Schabas, the leading authority on the Genocide Convention, has stated that a complicity finding against the United States is "certainly possible" given this record. The ICJ is not using the transcript as background color. It is in evidence because it goes directly to the knowledge element of complicity: Biden personally identified the operations as violating the specific legal framework that defines them as impermissible, then continued material support.

This created a political trap with no exit. Biden could not publicly acknowledge what he privately knew without confessing complicity in operations he had described as illegal in his own words. He could not defend the policy on legal merits because he had articulated the violation himself. And in spring 2024, at the peak of his primary vulnerability, with Arab-American voters organizing in Michigan and the campus encampment movement spreading "Genocide Joe" signs from Columbia to every major university in the country, the accurate political speech was threatening to go mainstream at precisely the worst possible moment.

The institutional response was not incidental. Over a dozen career State Department officials resigned with documented specific complaints: Hala Rharrit, an 18-year Arabic-language spokesperson, was given an ultimatum to stop documenting how the policy was destroying U.S. credibility in the Arab world. Stacy Gilbert resigned after an administration report to Congress falsely denied Israel was blocking humanitarian aid. These were not disgruntled employees—they were professionals whose job was to document reality, being told to stop. Simultaneously, Biden's Office for Civil Rights opened over sixty Title VI investigations targeting universities, operationalized the IHRA definition of antisemitism as an enforcement standard, and the administration supported congressional hearings in which Democratic members joined Republicans demanding Ivy League presidents declare specific pro-Palestinian slogans to be genocidal antisemitism—under implicit threat of funding withdrawal. Claudine Gay and Liz Magill resigned. Democratic mayors deployed police against encampments. The movement was crushed at its peak.

None of this required a conspiracy or explicit coordination. It required only convergent elite incentives: shared donor networks, shared foreign policy commitments, shared institutional interest in preventing accurate political speech from making a legally indefensible policy politically untenable. No Republican or Democrat would describe what they were doing in these terms. But the institutional sequence is documented and the causal logic is clear.

Trump inherited this apparatus and generalized it. He sent letters to sixty universities, layered Title IX and DEI enforcement on top of the existing Title VI machinery, froze Columbia's funding as a public demonstration, and through Project Esther designated student protesters as "Hamas Network Supporters"—converting a civil rights enforcement mechanism into an immigration enforcement instrument, with deportation as the consequence for green card holders who had engaged in protected political speech. The crater was bipartisanly dug. Trump deepened it and pointed it in new directions. Any future administration will inherit it.

This is bipartisan crater construction in its most precise and documentable form: a specific foreign policy commitment, known by the president himself to violate the legal framework he personally invoked, generating by political necessity a domestic institutional apparatus to suppress accurate speech about it—which then metastasized, as all institutional apparatuses do, far beyond its original purpose.

 

The ICE/DHS Machinery: Bureaucratic Inertia at Scale

This is where the abstract theory meets concrete arithmetic—and the numbers are staggering.

Through two pieces of legislation—the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 and the Secure America Act of June 2026—Congress has injected more than $140 billion into ICE and CBP, with all funds legally obligated through September 30, 2029. The breakdown includes $38 billion directly to ICE for expanded personnel, technology, and state and local partnerships; $22 billion to Border Patrol; $5 billion for border security technology; and $350 million specifically for local law enforcement agencies that coordinate with ICE. The result: eight mega-detention centers capable of holding 7,000–10,000 people each; sixteen regional processing facilities; 12,000 newly hired enforcement officers; and a national network of local law enforcement agencies financially integrated with federal immigration enforcement.

This is not a policy preference. By 2030, this is physical reality: concrete, steel, signed contracts, hired personnel on federal career tracks with pensions and union protections, private contractor profit streams with political lobbying power, and hundreds of local jurisdictions that have oriented their own budgets and staffing around federal coordination money.

The progressives who won New York primaries this week on "Abolish ICE" platforms are making a sincere moral claim about genuine cruelty. But as a programmatic promise, they will encounter not a policy preference but a civilizational-scale bureaucratic and financial commitment. A future administration cannot simply "not spend" money already legally obligated in contracts. It cannot fire 12,000 federal law enforcement officers by executive order. It cannot break multi-year private contracts without paying termination penalties. It cannot withdraw from local partnership agreements without generating opposition from hundreds of sheriffs and police chiefs across the country who have built their own budgets around federal coordination funds.

The honest question is not "How do we abolish ICE?" It is: How do we begin to reduce the scale and cruelty of this, incrementally, over many years, against organized resistance from every direction? That is a harder question. It is also the real one.

Some of the most consequential damage has been done through the courts, and this category requires careful handling because it is genuinely distinct from the others. Legal decisions can be reversed—Roe v. Wade's overturning in 2022 proves that even 49-year-old precedents are not permanent. So the damage here is not ontologically irreversible.

But "theoretically reversible" is doing enormous work in that sentence. Consider what reversal actually requires. The Supreme Court's 2025 Trump v. CASA decision—ruling 6–3 that federal district courts cannot issue nationwide injunctions against executive orders—transformed presidential EOs into effective diktats. Before CASA, a single federal judge anywhere in the country could halt an unconstitutional order nationwide while litigation proceeded. After CASA, an injunction applies only to named plaintiffs; the policy remains active and enforceable everywhere else while years of appeals grind forward. By the time a case reaches the Supreme Court for final resolution, the policy has been on the ground, restructuring reality, for years.

Reversing CASA requires a future Supreme Court majority with both the composition and the will to do so. The current majority was shaped by appointments that run through the 2030s and 2040s. It will not be this court. It will not be 2028 or 2032. It is, at minimum, a generational project—and that assumes the political infrastructure to pursue it even exists, which is not guaranteed.

The same analysis applies to the 2024 presidential immunity ruling (Trump v. United States), which granted absolute immunity for "core official acts" (including all DOJ directives) and effectively insulated the weaponization of federal law enforcement from legal challenge. And to Schedule F, which reclassified tens of thousands of career civil servants as at-will political appointees. And to the maximalist Unitary Executive doctrine, under which the president claims total, unreviewable control over the entire executive branch.

Roe took 49 years and a systematic, multi-decade legal and political project to overturn. The timeline for reversing this cluster of decisions is not shorter.


The Personalist Regime: How It Works

Underlying all of this structural change is a transformation in the style of political power that deserves to be named clearly: Trump 2.0 is a personalist regime, not merely an aggressive presidency.

The distinction matters. Richard Nixon was paranoid and retaliatory, but he operated within a party that could ultimately override him. When Nixon's conduct threatened the Republican Party as an institution, senior senators marched into the Oval Office and told him he had to go. The party protected itself from the leader. Under Trump 2.0, the party and the leader have completely merged. The RNC functions as an enforcement arm for personal mandates. Defying Trump is not a policy disagreement—it is treated as betrayal of the party itself.

Nixon's aggression was also largely covert: enemies lists in desk drawers, wiretaps hidden behind executive deniability. Trump's discipline is intentionally public. Screaming at senators in a closed-door luncheon, calling them "lunatics" to their faces, blasting them on social media within the hour—this is not loss of control. It is a calculated deterrent. Every Republican watching knows exactly what happens to the next person who steps out of line.

And crucially: under Nixon, policy disagreement was tolerated. Nixon signed the EPA into existence. His senators could oppose him on civil rights legislation without fearing annihilation. Under Trump 2.0, ideological consistency is irrelevant. Thomas Massie was one of the most conservative members of Congress by any voting record. Bill Cassidy had been a reliable Republican for decades. Neither mattered. What matters in a personalist regime is daily, transactional personal fealty—and the moment it lapses, the entire history of loyalty is erased.

The legal architecture has been constructed to make this style of rule effectively unchallengeable. Presidential immunity shields the leader personally from criminal and civil accountability. CASA shields his executive orders from lower-court injunction. A compliant Congress provides political cover. And the DOJ, under absolute presidential immunity for all directives to it, functions as a sword against opponents while the leader himself is insulated from any return fire.


The Ratchet That Only Turns One Way

There is one further dimension that receives insufficient attention: this apparatus does not disappear when Trump leaves office.

When one faction expands presidential power to achieve its political goals, the opposing faction does not voluntarily surrender those powers upon winning the White House. It inherits them. It uses them. This is not a partisan accusation—it is how institutional power works. Biden retained Trump's Golan Heights declaration. He used Title VI enforcement in ways his Republican predecessor pioneered. He ignored career diplomats' International Humanitarian Law warnings on Israel and continued military aid.

A future Democratic president will inherit: absolute immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts; a DOJ that can be directed against political opponents without legal challenge; an executive branch purged of Schedule F employees and restaffed with loyalists; CASA as settled law eliminating the most effective tool for challenging unconstitutional orders; and an immigration enforcement apparatus funded through 2029 with $140 billion in obligated spending. The president who inherits these tools and faces a genuine crisis—a major immigration emergency, a foreign policy confrontation, a domestic political threat—will face enormous pressure to use them. The tools are there. The legal architecture supports their use. The institutional constraints against using them have been systematically dismantled.

This is how structural authoritarianism becomes durable: not necessarily through a single autocrat who holds power indefinitely, but through a ratchet effect in which each administration adds to the arsenal and none voluntarily subtracts from it.


What "Recovery" Actually Means

None of this means democratic recovery is impossible. There is no determinism here. Ideological trends are genuinely fluid. Political coalitions realign. Crises open unexpected possibilities. A pro-democracy movement gaining traction in the 2030s is not fanciful.

But let us be honest about what that movement would actually be doing. It would not be restoring a pre-existing condition, the way you recover from a cold and return to normal. It would be building something new, from inside a world fundamentally altered by everything described above. The status quo ante of 2015 is not waiting to be retrieved. And even if it were, it was already a system producing the conditions for Trumpism—so retrieving it would not be much of a victory.

A democratic recovery movement in the 2030s would be working with: CASA as constitutional law; Schedule F as administrative reality; $140 billion in immigration enforcement infrastructure as physical fact; a weakened and atrophied Congress conditioned to deference; executive immunity as the legal environment for any challenge; and a public that has spent a decade with the current system as its baseline expectation. Any strategy that does not begin with this honest accounting—that speaks instead of "restoring democracy" as if it were a simple matter of winning enough elections—is not a strategy. It is a comfort narrative.

The real question is harder and more specific: Which craters can be addressed, by which means, on what timeline, by whom, against what organized resistance? For each one. Individually. With honest reckoning about the asymmetry between how easy it was to create the damage and how difficult it will be to address it.

That asymmetry—fast and cheap to destroy, slow and enormously costly to rebuild—is the central political fact of this moment. Naming it honestly is not pessimism. It is the precondition for any strategy serious enough to actually matter.