This week, the impact of what it means to be America under Trump 2.0 will continue to hit hard. One important indicator: Tourism to the U.S. is on the decline. Foreign countries including Canada, Denmark, Finland, Germany, and the U.K. have issued traveling warnings to their citizens who are considering trips to the United States. The United Kingdom warned of arrest or detention for those who violate the rules for entering the U.S., noting authorities “set and enforce” entry rules strictly. Finland and Denmark warned that trans people may encounter special difficulties, since the U.S. no longer recognizes their existence. I can remember checking carefully before we traveled to destinations in Central America or ahead of a trip to Jordan. When I was doing that, it never occurred to me that the United States of America might be on a list of countries people are warned about. It’s a shock. It’s an embarrassment. And strangest of all, despite the reporting, Trump seems to be getting off scot-free, despite the economic ripples a downswing in tourism is certain to cause, let alone the additional hit our global reputation takes. The thing is, these countries know. They understand what everything Trump is doing adds up to, even if the frogs here at home are letting themselves get boiled before they realize how hot the water is. Will Republicans in Congress ever wake up? A French scientist was blocked from entering the country because he had criticized Trump in private messages. It’s important to note that at the border, before entry into the United States, there are far fewer restrictions on searches the government can conduct, including of your electronic devices. 🚨NEW: A French scientist had his laptop searched at the US border & was sent back to Europe after private messages were found criticising Trump. He was accused of messages which “can be described as terrorism”. This is what a slide into FASCISM looks like. 1/ Wed, 19 Mar 2025 20:01:44 GMT View on BlueskyThen there is the case of a Canadian, Jasmine Mooney, who was detained by ICE for two weeks. She wrote in an opinion piece for the Guardian, “There was no explanation, no warning. One minute, I was in an immigration office talking to an officer about my work visa, which had been approved months before and allowed me, a Canadian, to work in the US. The next, I was told to put my hands against the wall, and patted down like a criminal before being sent to an Ice detention center without the chance to talk to a lawyer.” Her situation seems unprecedented, and her courage in speaking out, which likely means she’ll be unable to reenter the U.S. to work as she had hoped, really matters. Democracy does die in darkness; it’s important that we understand just how far the excesses in this administration go. Moody said no one would answer her questions about what was going on while she was held in a cell for two weeks—someone with a visa, who instead of being returned to Canada because customs had questions about the validity of her documentation, was held in custody in what she characterized as a freezing cell where she was given an aluminum blanket to cover herself. This sort of treatment of people who enter the country without documentation is appalling. Now, even people who believe they have a legal right to enter are at risk. Moody told me over the weekend, “I choose to use my voice — because remaining silent will never bring progress to this world. Change begins when we dare to speak the truths others are too afraid to say, especially when they challenge the system.” A Punk rock band from the U.K. encountered similar problems. Parents in Peru have decided it’s not safe to send the children to the United States on a study trip. Thomas Winston Morgan, the Executive Director of International Partnership for Service-Learning and Leadership (IPSL) Global Engagement at Westminster University wrote to tell me about the cancellation of an exchange program he is involved in. His colleague in Peru advised him they “had meetings with the students and their parents; they do not feel safe sending their children to the U.S. right now due to the ‘anti-Latino actions of the Trump administration.’” Foreign students, afraid it’s not safe for them to come to the U.S. Morgan said his colleague’s tone was “one of real fear and alarm” and that the “fear of not being allowed to enter the United States or something unpleasant happening to them there, especially considering that they are minors, were the biggest concerns.”
Morgan wrote that they have been working together and sending students to Peru for the last 13 years, but “everything changed with this election.” So much for the important bonds forged between the United States and other countries and the soft diplomacy and business development that result from these early interactions. It’s more than just a trip canceled here and a school program on hold there, it is the slow but steady erosion of global trust in the United States in progress. It takes decades to build those relationships but apparently only a few months to strip them away. Meantime, Trump is trying to take out the lawyers who have been successfully taking him to court. First you kill all the lawyers, and that’s where Trump has set his sights with a succession of executive orders that resulted in the Paul Weiss firm entering into an agreement with the White House that has sent heads spinning in the legal profession. If he succeeds in intimidating lawyers, there will be no one to challenge unlawful action. Now Trump has ordered Attorney General Pam Bondi to go directly after lawyers who refuse to bend the knee, and it’s yet another measure of how completely unsuited she is for the job that she’s still smiling and showing up on Fox News to support the president’s blatant efforts to still the practice of democracy. The ironically titled “Preventing Abuses of the Legal System and the Federal Court” presidential memorandum bears yesterday’s date and orders Bondi to:
Note the broad discretion implicit in all of these directives: Bondi is free to use this authority to curry favor with Trump by going after whomever he perceives as an enemy. His orders to her are clear. This is just one snapshot of where we are at the moment. The larger question that looms is, will we still be a democracy when this is over; are we still one now? One answer comes from a global watchdog that has suggested the United States could lose democracy status in its next report. “If it continues like this, the United States will not score as a democracy when we release [next year's] data,” Staffan Lindberg, head of the Varieties of Democracy project, at Sweden's University of Gothenburg wrote. The Project involves a serious study of democracies worldwide, involving 202 countries and 31 million data points, with work done by 4,200 scholars and contributors, who measure 600 different attributes of democracies. It’s a disturbing picture as we enter the week ahead, but one where Americans are continuing to wake up and express alarm for where we are headed. All across the country, plans are in progress for protests on April 5, and if you haven’t already heard about a local one, you’ll be able to find information online or even start one of your own if you’re so inclined. We are the guardrails. We are significant. Trump can only disband democracy is we accept what he does and stay silent. Yesterday on Bluesky, someone posted a 1945 “War Department education film” from the National Archives, circa 1945. It’s “Don’t Be A Sucker” and it explains how bullies divide people in order to take control of a country, using the obvious example at that time of Hitler and Nazi Germany. It’s a concept that we are all familiar with, but you may find this helpful for sharing with others who haven’t quite made the connection. There is something about its vintage World War II feel that lured me into watching the entire 22-minute clip and I feel better able to explain what’s going on today in America after doing so. Many thanks to the poster who shared it originally. We’re in this together, Joyce |
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