What Caught My Eye forMarch 5 - 11 (#7)
Some of the articles that caught my eye that I felt were worth sharing from March 5 to 11.
Is the U.S. heading into a dictatorship?
A fascinating, if not depressing interview about the Trump and the current state of America.
Donald Trump Must Stop Soon
In this war, Israel’s aim is clear: to demolish the threat posed by Iran’s regime. By contrast, Mr Trump and his cabinet have offered a mess of shifting assertions—about Iran’s missiles, nuclear weapons, regime change, following Israel’s lead, a “feeling” Iran was about to attack and settling scores after decades of enmity. Politically, vagueness gives Mr Trump room for manoeuvre. Strategically, his failure to say what Epic Fury is for is its biggest vulnerability.
“Not Ready for Prime Time.” A Federal Tool to Check Voter Citizenship Keeps Making Mistakes.
Make sure to pay close attention to your mail to ensure you’re not accidentally excluded from the voter rolls.
War in Iran, Shockwaves in Markets
A sobering discussion with and economics professor about the war in Iran.
The ‘Most Massive Attack On Free Speech’ Is Happening Right Now, And The Twitter Files Crew Is Mighty Quiet
This is what so many of us kept pointing out throughout the “Twitter Files” hysteria: the “free speech” grift was never about protecting individuals from the state. It was about protecting a specific type of speaker from the social consequences of their speech. The framework was always selectively deployed—outrage when a platform enforces its own rules against their allies, silence when the surveillance state comes for their critics.
The Trump administration is betting on that asymmetry. They’re betting that Google, Meta, Reddit, and Discord will quietly comply rather than spend millions in litigation over users who aren’t famous enough to generate headlines. They’re betting that the “free speech absolutists” will look the other way because the targets are the wrong kind of dissident.
Right now, the only institution consistently fighting these subpoenas is the ACLU. The platforms are folding. The “Twitter Files” journalists are hedging. And the man who bought a social media company specifically to be a “free speech” champion is busy posting memes.
Turns out we found the censorship industrial complex. And everyone who spent years warning us about it just shrugged.