washington

Facts 'don’t care' about your feelings: How Trump is hiding from Epstein behind DC lies

Washington Monthly editor Bill Scher says President Donald Trump is not only dodging behind DC to escape his Epstein scandal but also behind bogus crime figures to build his cover.

“‘Facts don’t care about your feelings’ is a maxim popularized by the conservative commentator Ben Shapiro,” writes Scher, but the ‘facts don't care about your feelings’ crowd suddenly prefers "vibes" over D.C. crime statistics that demolish Trump's justification for federal police control.”

Scher notes right-wing podcaster Michael Knowles defended Trump’s federal takeover of the Washington, D.C. police, claiming it was “in response to skyrocketing crime.” This was despite the fact that the rate of violent crime in D.C in 2024 is down by more than a third since 2023, and more than half since 2010.

READ MORE: Trump's catastrophic collapse is real — and he may take us all down with him

But it’s not just right-wing media pushing the rising crime fantasy, said Scher. MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough recently declared “I don’t care what the crime statistics say. Crime has been a problem in this city for the 32 years I’ve been living inside and outside of the city. I think Congress and the President should have stepped in 30 years ago.”

Scher also referenced Axios reporter Alex Thompson admitting “we have a 30-year low … [of] violent crime,” while also claiming he’d “talked to Democrat strategists” that think citing statistics is “sort of a tone deaf way to react” to crime.

But all this “hypothesizing about feelings” ignores a bigger issue, said Scher.

“We should look at the statistics, not to argue that crime is no longer a problem in D.C. or anywhere [but] … because when you do you will see that the President of the United States is brazenly lying about crime in D.C. to falsely claim there is an 'emergency' and exploit the law that allows the federal government to temporarily take over the D.C. police force in emergencies,” Scher said.

READ MORE: 'Where are the limits?' Judge explodes at Trump DOJ from the bench

And even if you are going strictly on “feelings,” Scher asks what is the evidence that there is an actual panic about crime? A poll by The Economist/YouGov asked respondents which of 15 different issues is most important to you, and “Crime” ranked 12th with only two percent.

“This is not a national electorate worked up about crime,” said Scher, adding “most Americans don’t see rampant crime in their neighborhoods and are not so easily manipulated by Trump’s attempts to turn the media spotlight away from less favorable topics such as his administration’s high tariffs and broken promises to release the Epstein files.”

But Trump needs a “distraction,” said Scher. “As an authoritarian at heart, he needs foils. He needs hellscapes to rail against. He needs excuses to justify power grabs. He needs problems, and he needs Democratic scapegoats for those problems.”

Scher added that “rationalizing” Trump’s actions as technically legal only sets the stage for more abuses in other cities. “The only thing 'tone deaf' in this dialogue is the downplaying of authoritarian encroachment into our daily lives.”

READ MORE: Fox News abruptly ends interview with Texas Democrat after he turns question on host

Read the full Washington Monthly report at this link.

'Unseemly': Critics alarmed with Trump Jr.'s 'transformation into Washington power broker'

In President Donald Trump’s second term, his son Donald Jr. has reportedly evolved from playing a relatively quiet role in Washington to becoming an influential figure in the nation's capital.

A report published in CBS News Wednesday titled "Donald Trump Jr.'s transformation into Washington power broker," quoted former White House press secretary Sean Spicer — who is familiar with Trump Jr. — as describing him as the "most prominent non-elected representative of the MAGA base hands down.

Spicer went on to call Donald Jr. "the No. 1 surrogate and power player in the ecosystem outside of his father."

READ MORE: Trump biographer reveals 'head-smacking' detail about Trump and Melania's marriage

Last month, Donald Jr.'s ultra-exclusive private club called "Executive Branch" was launched in Washington, and the launch event was attended by Trump administration officials. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Attorney General Pam Bondi, Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul Atkins, and FCC Chair Brendan Carr were among the guests, per the report.

It was later revealed by prominent newsletter writers that the club’s membership costs $500,000.

The report noted that exclusive clubs have traditionally been part of Washington’s landscape. They offer a space where lobbyists and wealthy donors interact with lawmakers and senior officials.

However, this initiative spearheaded by the president’s eldest son represents a departure from the norm — and, according to critics, illustrates how the Trump family has intensified the capital’s pay-to-play dynamics.

READ MORE: 'Be quiet!' Inside the 5 most explosive moments from Kristi Noem's 'laughable' testimony

For government watchdog groups, the exclusive social club represents what they view as a bold and growing entanglement between private enterprise and public policy.

Brett Kappel, a veteran Washington, D.C., election lawyer told CBS: "It's unseemly and it undermines the public's faith that the government is operating in the public interest."

Following his father's victory in the 2024 election, Trump Jr. has taken positions on at least eight corporate boards or advisory panels, according to the report.

Joseph Briffaut, a law professor at Columbia Law School, told CBS: "I don't think there has ever been anything comparable to this use of the presidency to advance private business interests."

READ MORE: 'Fully prostrate on the ground': Trump ripped for 'humiliating' display to Arab leaders

Prominent Mich. Republican couple joins conservative Facebook group discussing possibility of civil war

DETROIT – Michigan state Rep. Matt Maddock, R-Milford, and his wife, Meshawn Maddock, who is poised to become the next co-chair of the Michigan Republican Party, have joined a Facebook group where members have discussed the possibility of a civil war, decried a ban on open carry inside the state Capitol and hope for a "big cleanup" of elected leaders. The Maddocks have played a leading role in the effort to overturn Michigan's election results, and the two were in Washington, D.C., when the president's supporters stormed the Capitol building in a deadly assault last Wednesday. Meshawn Maddock ...

Woman fatally shot in US Capitol was a San Diego resident and Air Force veteran, family says

SAN DIEGO — The woman shot and killed inside the U.S. Capitol Building during a violent pro-Trump siege Wednesday was a resident of San Diego's Ocean Beach, according to her extended family and media reports. Her husband confirmed to KUSI-TV that the woman, whose shooting was captured on video, was 35-year-old Ashli Elizabeth Babbitt, and said she was an Air Force veteran. A family member who said they saw videos of the shooting — the bystander footage has flooded the internet — and are convinced that the woman was Babbitt. “It’s her. It’s her. It’s definitely her,” the family member said. But...

American Legion removes post commander from national leadership role over Proud Boys affiliation

ESCONDIDO, Calif. — An American Legion post commander in Escondido has been removed by the veterans service organization from two national leadership roles after he bragged on social media about participating in a street brawl and joining the Proud Boys, the California state commander said. Photos shared on two social media accounts show J.B. Clark Post 149 Cmdr. Michael Sobczak, 56, wearing a Proud Boys jacket and marching along with other Proud Boys during a Dec. 12 pro-Trump rally in Washington, D.C., that turned violent. In a video shared on a personal Facebook account under the name “Mick...

Will Bunch: Trump's politicized Supreme Court has lost legitimacy. 2021's Dems, do something!

We’ve just seen one of the worst weeks in the 230-year-plus history of the U.S. Supreme Court. And that is really saying something, when you think about its other low points including the 1857 Dred Scott ruling, which held Black people as inferior and denied them U.S. citizenship, or 1896’s Plessy v. Ferguson that allowed segregation, or the high court’s more recent jags that have prized corporate citizenship and eroded voting rights.And yet it is becoming increasingly difficult to have faith in the Supreme Court’s independence — and, thus, its legitimacy — after a day that should be known as ...

Suffering from COVID-19 science overload? This university team wades through the deluge so you don't have to

SEATTLE — Remember early spring, when it felt like we were all plunged into a crash course in epidemiology, heads spinning with terms like “R-naught,” “flatten the curve” and “herd immunity?” Every new nugget of data and scientific insight about the novel coronavirus was headline news, ricocheting from Twitter to technical journals to talking heads.The wall-to-wall coverage has eased since then, but the pace of discovery hasn’t. Every day, hundreds of new research papers are published or posted about the virus and pandemic, ranging from case studies of single patients to randomized, controlled...

Trump officials admit diverting 9/11 treatment funds was wrong, but stall returning $4M

WASHINGTON — Top officials in the Trump administration responsible for withholding nearly $4 million from the New York Fire Department’s 9/11 treatment program now say it was “unacceptable” — but still haven’t figured out how to give back money siphoned away from ailing EMTs and firefighters.The money was taken in bits and pieces by the Treasury Department since 2016 to pay down a still-unexplained Medicare debt purportedly owed by the city that has nothing to do with the Fire Department.New York lawmakers have pointed out that federal law gives Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin authority to w...

Alaska Airlines to furlough or lay off more employees as COVID-19 grips travel industry

As federal aid for airlines runs out and negotiations over more coronavirus relief stall, Alaska Airlines has begun cutting nearly 450 more flight attendants and other employees from its payroll while borrowing $1.3 billion from the U.S. Treasury.The furloughs, first reported by online aviation magazine The Points Guy, were hardly unexpected. In June, Seattle-based Alaska announced it would begin slashing 3,000 jobs from its 23,000-person workforce starting at the end of September to bring expenses more in line with revenues, which have plunged as the COVID-19 pandemic curtailed travel.The vas...

Trump administration will not take additional money from FDNY's 9/11 treatment program

WASHINGTON — According to a letter sent to New York lawmakers late Wednesday, the U.S. Treasury Department has agreed to stop siphoning cash away from the Fire Department’s 9/11 treatment program, but it remains unclear when or if the FDNY would get its missing money back.The federal agency began docking payments meant to care for ill firefighters and EMTs back in 2016 in a move that was never explained to the FDNY’s World Trade Center Treatment program.In all, FDNY Chief Medical Officer Dr. David Prezant estimates that $3.7 million that was sent to his program by the National Institute of Occ...

Trump's ban on WeChat threatens a vital network for Chinese community in Philadelphia area

PHILADELPHIA — For many local Chinese Americans and immigrants from China, the social media app WeChat is a lifeline to government services, community events, friends, and family living on the other side of the Pacific.If the Trump administration has its way, it’ll be taken away.“We are so disappointed, not just because he’s making this hateful language as calling it (the coronavirus) the Chinese flu or the China virus,” said Wei Chen, president of Asian Americans United, a Philadelphia organization focused on fighting discrimination against the Asian community, “but banning WeChat is a hatefu...

@2026 - AlterNet Media Inc. All Rights Reserved. - "Poynter" fonts provided by fontsempire.com.