pouet.chapril.org est l'un des nombreux serveurs Mastodon indépendants que vous pouvez utiliser pour participer au fédiverse.
Chapril https://www.chapril.org est un projet de l'April https://www.april.org

Administré par :

Statistiques du serveur :

1,1K
comptes actifs

#chaos

42 messages23 participants1 message aujourd’hui

Our worst enemies couldn't design a better way to harm our govt than what's going on right now.”

“There’s no real method to it -no geopol connection."

Under Musk: admin is firing 1000s of prob employees. The effort has upended the lives of govt workers.

“Move fast & break things,” If that involves breaking the law, then that becomes problematic.”

#Trump largely speaks to the country thru SM posts that go viral...

#Tariffs #Firings #DOGE #Musk #Chaos #Resist #USPol

nbcnews.com/politics/donald-tr

NBC News · Chaos, confusion, reversals: The story of Trump's second term so farPar Peter Nicholas

The Precarious Republic: Understanding the Fascist Threat to Modern Democracies

What if it doesn’t take years, or even months, for a democracy to collapse—but only a few short weeks? The idea that a stable republic could fall in ninety days may seem exaggerated, until you look at the historical record. Then it becomes a haunting possibility. Fascism doesn’t always arrive with fanfare or fire. Sometimes, it walks in through the front door, wearing a suit and a smile, welcomed by the very institutions it plans to dismantle.

History tells us as much. The Weimar Republic didn’t die in a coup—it eroded from within. Italy’s liberal government didn’t collapse overnight—it was coaxed into irrelevance by elites who thought they could manage Mussolini. Democracies, even mature ones, are not as durable as we like to think. They depend not only on constitutions and courts, but on norms, trust, and shared belief in the rule of law. When those things begin to fray—under economic crisis, cultural upheaval, or political fragmentation—fascist movements often see an opening.

And they don’t need to win by force. They can win elections. They can exploit legal ambiguities, weaponize fear, and slowly nudge the public into seeing the extraordinary as inevitable. The paradox of fascism is that it often rises through the very tools of democracy—until, one day, those tools are broken.

But how does that happen? And why do people, often ordinary and otherwise decent, go along?

Fascism is not just a political project. It’s a psychological and cultural phenomenon. It doesn’t start with ideology. It starts with emotion: fear, humiliation, alienation. In times of crisis, people look for answers—simple ones. They crave order, certainty, a sense of purpose. Fascist leaders understand this deeply. They don’t need to be right. They just need to be emotionally resonant. They offer scapegoats instead of solutions, enemies instead of arguments. They give people a story that makes sense of chaos, even if it’s a lie.

And they tell that story well. Propaganda is the fascist’s most refined weapon—not brute force, at least not at first. Fascist regimes excel at crafting reality itself: through slogans, through cinema, through orchestrated mass events, through education, through repetition. It’s not about convincing people through evidence. It’s about bypassing reason entirely and targeting the gut, the identity, the tribal loyalties. The goal is not just to control behavior. It’s to remake how people see the world.

This isn’t just a relic of the 1930s. Today, the tools are more sophisticated. Algorithms now do what radio and film once did. Social media personalizes outrage. Misinformation moves faster than fact-checking. But the playbook remains familiar: vilify the press, attack pluralism, elevate a charismatic leader as the only truth. In short, the conditions that gave us fascism in the past have not disappeared. In some ways, they’ve become more efficient.

And yet, fascism doesn’t triumph in a vacuum. It requires permission—sometimes active, sometimes passive. It needs institutions too weak or too paralyzed to resist. It needs elites who think they can harness the populist wave, only to be swallowed by it. Most tragically, it needs people who begin to rationalize the intolerable. “Just for now,” they say. “It’s better than chaos.” And by the time they realize the cost, it’s too late.

So, what can be done?

First, we must stop thinking of democracy as self-sustaining. It isn’t. It’s a living system that requires maintenance—legal, moral, cultural. Elections alone are not enough. We need strong, independent courts. We need checks and balances that actually check and balance. We need a press that can survive without being vilified or captured. We need to protect the machinery of democracy from those who would use it to destroy it.

Second, we need to build resilience against propaganda and disinformation. That means investing in education—not just civic mechanics, but critical thinking, media literacy, and historical awareness. It means defending independent journalism and demanding transparency from platforms that profit from division. And it means recognizing that fact-checking is not enough. We have to address the emotional and identity needs that lies fulfill.

Third, we have to renew democracy itself. People must feel it works. That it listens. That it delivers fairness and opportunity. A democracy that only functions for the privileged will not survive when the winds of authoritarianism blow. That means addressing inequality, rebuilding social trust, and making space for real participation—from town halls to citizens’ assemblies. Cynicism is not a defense against fascism. It’s a gateway.

Finally, we need to confront our own vulnerabilities. None of us is immune to the pull of tribalism or the appeal of certainty. In times of fear, we all look for something solid. But democracy is not supposed to offer certainty. It offers process. It offers compromise. It is frustrating and slow and imperfect. And that is precisely what makes it humane.

Fascism offers clarity—but it is the clarity of a clenched fist. Democracy offers doubt—but it is the doubt of an open hand. The challenge of our time is to choose the harder path, again and again, with eyes open and memory intact.

Because the fascist mind does not disappear. It adapts. It waits. And the only true defense against it is a republic that knows it is precarious—and fights every day to remain whole.

Suite du fil

Ben Meiselas reports on an interview he did with Elizabeth Warren about Trump's economic "policy" and insider trading with the tariff chaos. He notes:

"What we’re witnessing isn’t leadership. It’s a billionaire boys club strip-mining the country while they cackle over champagne and pink slips."

#Musk #Trump #DOGE #economy #recession #tariffs #StockMarket #InsiderTrading #chaos
/4

meidasplus.com/p/sen-elizabeth

The craziness and chaos continues. Today Trump exempted the 125% tariffs on cellphones, computers and some other electronics made in China. There is no plan. Decisions are being made ad hoc. Trust in the US is plummeting. Senseless destruction. #uspol #tariffs #chaos

Suite du fil

"Beyond Jesus’s physical appearance, when teaching young white boys and men about Jesus and also about the kind of masculinity Jesus evidences, we can lean into the actual Bible stories of Jesus’s life, death, and resurrection. Jesus’s first appearance in the Bible is as a newborn baby, completely reliant on the care of those around him, vulnerable and inarguably needy."

~ Angela Denker

kristindumez.substack.com/p/sp

#Musk #Trump #chaos #misogyny #women #masculinity #WhiteChristianNationalism
/9

Du Mez CONNECTIONS · Spray-Tanned Warrior JesusPar Kristin Du Mez
Suite du fil

"I have never seen an anti-feminist backlash quite like the one we are living through. The embrace of misogyny is thorough and unapologetic. It transcends just about every aspect of this administration, from the president down through his followers.

~ Jill Filipovic

#Musk #Trump #MAGA #destruction #chaos #fascism #suicide #empathy #morality #religion #WhiteChristianNationalism #misogyny #women
/8

jill.substack.com/p/boys-will-

Jill Filipovic · Boys Will Be Boys But Women Are Too Emotional for the Supreme CourtPar Jill Filipovic
Suite du fil

"Susan Lanzoni, a historian of psychology and author of Empathy: A History, said by email that through all her research into the intellectual history of empathy, she had 'never seen empathy vilified in the way it has been in these current sources [on the American right]'."

~ Julia Carrie Wong

#Musk #Trump #MAGA #destruction #chaos #fascism #suicide #empathy #morality #religion #WhiteChristianNationalism
/5

theguardian.com/us-news/ng-int

The Guardian · Loathe thy neighbor: Elon Musk and the Christian right are waging war on empathyPar Julia Carrie Wong
Suite du fil

"We as a country need to face up to who we really are if we are to have any hope of not sliding over the cliff we’re currently approaching at a rapid pace. ...

it’s still hard for me to get past the fact that, for whatever reason (ignorance, racism, sexism, misinformation, disinformation, laziness), an incredibly large number of Americans voted for Trump. Twice."

~ Keith Owens

#Musk #Trump #MAGA #destruction #chaos #fascism #suicide
/2

wearespeaking.substack.com/p/w

We Are Speaking · Who are we really?Par Keith Owens

"We are witnessing a political march and mass suicide of our society into the graveyard of history. ...

Historians will write, philosophers will ponder, and prophets will preach about how our generation whistled, disregarded truth, dismantled democracy, rejected liberty, and profaned justice as we marched into that graveyard."

~ Wendell Griffen

#Musk #Trump #MAGA #destruction #chaos #fascism #suicide
/1

wendellgriffen.substack.com/p/

Wendell Griffen on Faith, Hope, Justice, Love, and Peace · THE UNHEEDED, TRAGIC, AND INESCAPABLE TRUTH ABOUT THE USAPar Wendell Griffen