By George Lakey
Despite his dreams, Trump is not a King. Marisa Kabas may have again broken the news. The Washington Post writes: “The White House budget office on Wednesday rescinded an order freezing federal grants, according to a copy of a new memo obtained by The Washington Post, after the administration’s move to halt spending earlier this week provoked a backlash.”
He didn’t back down because it was a good idea. It wasn’t a change of heart. It wasn’t a feint. It was a genuine administrative coup that — for now — has been thwarted.
He backed down because people pushed back — getting media to do their job and alert us to an impending problem, calling Senators who (more or less) found their spines, lawyers challenging the coup, telling the story of the many who would suffer under such an order, joining last-minute DC protests…
We’d like you to pause before your inner cynic speaks up (the one that says “he’ll try another version” or “look at all the other things he’s destroyed and people suffering”).
The point is stunningly important: Trump can lose when we fight. He is not invincible and he is not all powerful.
It doesn’t mean we will win every fight. But it does mean that anyone who is telling you it’s hopeless is wrong. Folks need to get this message: our feelings are valid, but any conclusion that says it’s over is wrong. They, too, will get a chance to join and we hope they do.
To us, the biggest stories not being told are the many, many acts of resistance all over. We wish we had journalists covering this. For example:
- Teachers rejecting ICE raids (“we jump in front of bullets for our students”)
- Folks rejecting President-in-action-but-not-elected Elon Musk’s potentially illegally sent and possibly illegal buyout offer to 2 million government workers (comments are fire: “I’ll be honest, before that email went out, I was looking for any way to get out of this fresh hell. But now I am fired up to make these goons as frustrated as possible, RTO be damned. Hold the Line!”)
- National trainings teaching people how to organize and strengthen community when workplace raids happen (we recommend these!) or Teen Vogue’s story on ICE Watch Programs Can Protect Immigrants in Your Neighborhood — Here’s What to Know
- Lawyers standing up for the rule of law — like 22 state attorneys general sued Trump over birthright order or ACLU suing fast-track deportation policy or Quakers suing to stop ICE out of worship services
- The internet spamming the DEI snitch tipline
- Greenlanders refusing to give up free healthcare and education and rejecting any US takeover or Colombian President Petro staring down Trump and winning the “dignity” of returnees he asked for (the US media let Trump claim victory — but international press report this very differently, like here or here or read Petro’s full statement)
- Groups like Civil Service Strong helping government workers sort through their decisions in these trying times
- and the many people finding their path in these times.
Yes, we know the overwhelm is still there. There’s a reason. It’s called Shock and Awe. The goal is chaos and constant crisis to push through radical changes. The goal is to push our cognitive limits to overload, so we get paralyzed.
One implication of this: to stay active, many of us will need to limit our attention. Doing so is not a rejection of other issues. It’s that in a time of rapid chaos, none of us can do it all. Let’s give ourselves that permission. And then let’s extend that grace [to] our allies — for not joining the causes most central to us or for picking a strategy that we think isn’t most effectual. It’s okay to pick your lane and focus on that. In fact, we need you to. (We have this video to help remind people of different paths they may take.)
An overwhelmed teacher asked us what they should be doing to help their students. After an extended conversation that included their basic rights to keep out ICE, it came down to this: “The thing they most fear is an educated population. Teach your students.” Do what you do best. We knew there would be a lot of loss in this time, and there is. We’ll have to keep planting seeds for a better future.
We want to thank Democracy Forward for its leading lawsuits. Again, thanks to journalists like Marisa Kabas (an independent journalist at The Handbasket) and Anand Giridharadas (who quoted us in The Ink). Please support our independent journalists who did not downplay this administrative coup and raised their voices right away. Thanks Rebecca Solnit who first pulled our attention to this.
Some things we’re going to go do: Eat some ice cream, pet a cat, and tap some maple trees with our kid. And then keep fighting the best we can.
Warmly,
– Choose Democracy
George Lakey
New paperback, a memoir: Dancing with History: A Life for Peace and Justice, from Seven Stories Press.
Recent books still popular: Facilitating Group Learning: Strategies for Success with Diverse Learners. https://www.pmpress.org. And from Melville House: Viking Economics: How the Scandinavians got it right and how we can, too, and HOW WE WIN: A Guide to Nonviolent Direct Action Campaigning, https://www.mhpbooks.com/books
Earth Quaker Action Team (EQAT.org).
Columnist for WagingNonviolence.org
This letter was sent out January 29, 2025 by George Lakey.