Wednesday, February 18, 2026

We the Nobodies

 [The original version of this blog can be found on Substack here.]

[See the Postscript at the bottom to play the game Guess the Autocracy.] 

It’s Presidents Day, an apt time to direct your attention to a bold documentary that is chilling in both its global relevance and its uncanny and unintentional similarity to America’s president. 

The documentary is Mr. Nobody Against Putin. We saw it the other night and we’re rooting for it to win best documentary at the Oscars on March 15

It’s the story of Pavel (Pasha) Talankin, a teacher and school videographer in the small, pollution-ridden town of Karabash, Russia whose isolated implosion leads him to surreptitiously document by video the evolution of the school into a Putin-propaganda indoctrination cap for students. 
Pasha Talankin
The parallels between his world under Putin and ours under Trump only a couple of years later inspire a belief that each of us has a duty to overcome silence and acquiescence in answer to the call of the soul. What Talankin does is the stuff of fantasy and savior complexes that has him relocate via Turkey, Prague, and the Sundance Film Festival to Los Angeles where he awaits the Academy Awards. 
The film has replaced my default of measuring Trump and his henchmen against Nazi Germany with a vivid, more contemporary reality. The film shows Putin on TV announcing apparently out of nowhere: “I decided to conduct a special military operation” and I think Venezuela, Greenland, Iran. 

The film heralds the New Federal Patriotic Education Policy and I read Trump’s executive order of Jan. 29, “ending Radical Indoctrination in K-12 Schooling.” 

The film introduces us to Pavel Abdulmanov, a by-the-book, patriotic teacher, who somehow wins the area’s best teacher award, lecturing grade school students on the “economic component of hybrid warfare” and the way Europe is suffering at the hands of Russia’s superiority. The “French will soon be like the musketeers,” he boasts, and I think of Lutnick and Bessent. 
 Pavel Abdulmanov 
He regales the students that in the U.S., there are demonstrations supporting Russia, and I think of Trump boasting that he knows Putin and can end the Russia-Ukraine conflict in a day. Two years later, there’s Trump with an adjusted boast that he’s ended eight wars but that the Russia-Ukraine conflict is a mess, needing two to tango

The film has Mr. Nobody arguing with his mom in a library, complaining that with Putin, “one idiot decides to do this, and the whole world is afraid.” I think maybe it takes two idiots to have the whole world be afraid. “It would have been better if he just sat at his desk and did nothing,’ Mr. Nobody vents. Is he the brother I never had? 

Mr. Nobody feels trapped and bemoans that “even a guy like me should have some principles.” I feel the same, an "alien in my own country," as he put it. 

The film turns to some protests in the streets and to women on the street being interviewed and asked, “Is there anyone against the war?” They say no, laugh and one adds, “they won’t even dare to be against.” And I think of Minneapolis and the Trump HESTAFO being accusatory and vocally unapologetic about killing two people protesting the government’s anti-immigrant excesses, though looking fetching with hair flowing off her shoulders, bubbled lips and eyebrows on fleek.

The film revisits Abdulmanov, who’s asked whom he most admires in Russian history. He mentions Stalin’s KGB chief and father of the Gulag system, Stalin’s spy hunter, and a person responsible for how Trotsky was killed. I think Homan, Bovino, and Miller. (He even looks like Miller). 
Abdulmanov tells the students, “If you were born in this country and don’t believe we’re doing the right thing, then leave,” and I think of Trump lashing out at Olympic athletes competing for Team USA
Mr. Nobody reflects on what it means to love his country; not the flag or the anthems or the propaganda, but the memories, the cold, the seasons, the people, and the ability to say, “we have a problem.” I envision the bombast of the year ahead, of America’s 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, dubbed Freedom 250, replete with military fanfare and a prayer event on the national mall
From June 2025
250 years of the American Army's history
was commemorated on June 14 in front of a massive crowd of citizens and top US officials.
The parade coincided with President Trump's 79th birthday,
with over 6,000 soldiers, 150 military vehicles
and hundreds of aircraft taking to the streets and skies.
Click here to view the parade in the Hindustan Times
The film reports that in April 2023, Putin released updated laws on treason, making it easier to punish people for being a traitor to the motherland. I recall the fake video Trump helped circulate showing former President Obama being arrested by the FBI, to underscore his and U.S Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard’s claims that Obama was guilty of seditiously trying to steal the 2016 election

I read the other day that a five-country analysis of the death two years ago of Putin critic Alexey Navalny while in prison was caused by a lethal toxin found in poison dart frogs in South America that they concluded only “the Russian state had the combined means, motive and disregard for international law” to contribute to Navalny’s death. I think Epstein. You? 
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Postscript: You now should be ready to play the game Guess the Autocracy

(No deep fake or AI tools were used or abused in choosing these photos.) 

 Russian or American? 

A
B
C
D
                                                                            E                                                                           

[Update: Also on Presidents Day, Federal Judge Cynthia Rufe, ruled that the exhibit about nine people enslaved by George Washington must be restored at his former home in Philadelphia (see details at Sinners who brandish the torch). The Trump administration had taken it down last month. Judge Rufe’s ruling was yet another stinging judicial slap at Trump’s decision making.

“As if the Ministry of Truth in George Orwell’s 1984 now existed, with its motto ‘Ignorance is Strength,’ this Court is now asked to determine whether the federal government has the power it claims—to dissemble and disassemble historical truths when it has some domain over historical facts.” The judge, an appointee of George W. Bush concluded, “It does not.” The Trump administration immediately appealed.]


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Friday, February 13, 2026

Judges who don’t hold back: The only vigilant branch weaponizes wit

[The original version of this blog can be found on Substack here.].                                 Feb. 7, 2026

[Update: On Presidents Day, Federal Judge Cynthia Rufe, ruled that the exhibit about nine people enslaved by George Washington must be restored at his former home in Philadelphia (see details at Sinners who brandish the torch). The Trump administration had taken it down last month. Judge Rufe’s ruling was yet another stinging judicial slap at Trump’s decision making.

“As if the Ministry of Truth in George Orwell’s 1984 now existed, with its motto ‘Ignorance is Strength,’ this Court is now asked to determine whether the federal government has the power it claims—to dissemble and disassemble historical truths when it has some domain over historical facts.” The judge, an appointee of George W. Bush concluded, “It does not.” The Trump administration immediately appealed.]

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Ever since Alexander Hamilton penned Federalist 78 in 1788, “like he was running out of time,” the Judiciary has been thought to “always be the least dangerous to the political rights of the Constitution.” Why’d Hamilton believe that? He wrote, “because it will be least in a capacity to annoy or injure them.” 


That’s become ironic. 

He explained, “It may truly be said to have neither FORCE nor WILL [caps Hamilton’s, not mine or Trump’s], but merely judgment.” That’s become prescient. 

Today, as the separation of powers separates one branch - a hapless, craven legislature divided across aisles of rhetoric and showmanship – from a self-proclaimed unitary executive who’s been granted “presumptive immunity from prosecution for his official acts” and whose power in international affairs is limited only by his “own morality” – from a Supreme Court majority that has openly coveted partisanship, bias, and corruption. 

It would be understandable to conclude that all three branches of American government are in Trump’s pocket. Checkmate. 

In just over one year, the Trump administration has had its litigious hands full. The Lawfare Institute has documented what it calls The Trials of the Trump Administration. It’s updated daily and it outpaces accountants at tax time. 

Mind the small print. Federalist 78 is about “The Judiciary Department.” There’s more to the Judiciary than the Supreme Court. 

Though we’ve grown accustomed to the Supreme Court planting its big feet on lower court rulings, often without oral arguments or signed opinions, lower court judges know how to think and write. 

Cadres of judges who hail from the Judiciary are not holding back. They’ve transformed the least dangerous branch into the only vigilant branch. They’ve preserved judgment and in lieu of force and will, weaponized wit. 
[Click here for the NYT story.]

The judges don’t mince words. They recognize that words won’t be erased even if the Supreme Court overturns their decisions. 

There’s Federal Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, who, the other day, permanently blocked two provisions of a Trump executive order that sought to impose proof-of-citizenship rules on elections. 


Sometimes, it’s simple. 

Within days of Trump taking the oath of office, Federal Judge John C. Coughenour issued a ruling temporarily blocking President Trump’s executive order that aimed to end birthright citizenship for children born to immigrants in the U.S. temporarily or without legal status. 

He wrote: “I’ve been on the bench for four decades, I can’t remember another case where the question presented is as clear as this one is,” Coughenour said, describing Trump’s order as “blatantly unconstitutional.” 

He had more to say: “There are other times in world history where we look back and people of goodwill can say, ‘Where were the judges? Where were the lawyers?’ “ the judge said, according to KUOW News

With the Supreme Court securely entrenched, the issue of birthright citizenship may be “blatantly unconstitutional”…for now. The Supreme Court hears oral arguments this coming April Fool’s Day

Tis a gift to be simple. Some cases bear other gifts. 

In the high profile detention case the other day of Adrian Conejo Arias and his minor son, L.C.R., Federal Judge Fred Biery for the Western District of Texas, described the case this way: 


“Apparent also is the government’s ignorance of an American historical document called the Declaration of Independence.” Historical ouch. 

“Thirty-three-year-old Thomas Jefferson enumerated grievances against a would-be authoritarian king over our nascent nation. Among others were: 1. “He has sent hither Swarms of Officers to harass our People.” 2. “He has excited domestic Insurrection among us.” 3. “For quartering large Bodies of Armed Troops among us.” 4. “He has kept among us, in Times of Peace, Standing Armies without the consent of our Legislatures.” 

The judge continued, “’We the people are hearing echos of that history.” 

He went on, with pen just warming up. “And then there is that pesky inconvenience called the Fourth Amendment. From simple to pesky. 

“Civics lesson to the government: Administrative warrants issued by the executive branch to itself do not pass probable cause muster. That is called the fox guarding the henhouse. The Constitution requires an independent judicial officer.” 

From pesky through civics all the way to perfidy, lust, cruelty and human indecency. This judge is witty but not kidding. 

“Observing human behavior confirms that for some among us, the perfidious lust for unbridled power and the imposition of cruelty in its quest know no bounds and are bereft of human decency. And the rule of law be damned.” 


Also last week, another federal judge, Ana Reyes, felt the need to hold the Trump administration accountable when she found it claiming one thing to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitians and spewing another thing to vilify Haitians in flagrant efforts to talk out of both sides of foul federal mouths. 

She too provided an unsolicited history lesson: “On Dec. 2, 1783, then-Commander-in-Chief George Washington penned: ‘America is open to receive not only the Opulent & respected Stranger, but the oppressed & persecuted of all Nations & Religions.’ 

“More than two centuries later, Congress reaffirmed President Washington’s vision by establishing the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program. It provides humanitarian relief to foreign nationals in the United States who come from disaster-stricken countries. It also brings in substantial revenue, with TPS holders generating $5.2 billion in taxes annually.” 

The judge introduced the five Haitian TPS holders who had filed suit. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem said publicly of Haitians that they should not have protective status because they are “killers, leeches, or entitlement junkies.” Turns out the five are: a neuroscientist researching Alzheimer’s disease, a software engineer at a national bank, a laboratory assistant in a toxicology department, a college economics major, and a full-time registered nurse. 

Judge Reyes found that it “seems substantially likely that Noem “preordained her termination decision and did so because of hostility to nonwhite immigrants.” DHS sought to terminate protective status because conditions in Haiti are merely “concerning” and that harm to the Haitians if returned is speculative. For some reason, the Trump administration included in its briefs the State Dept’s travel warnings. 

[Click here for the full Haiti travel warnings.]

The judge noted that ‘Do not travel to Haiti for any reason’ “does not exactly scream, as Secretary Noem concluded, suitable for return.” Oops. Caught between a rock and a hard place to survive. 

The judge also questioned the Trump administration’s policy complaints; the strains unlawful immigrants place on our immigration-enforcement system. The government’s answer? Turn 352,959 lawful immigrants into unlawful immigrants overnight. The complaints of strains to our economy. The answer? Turn employed lawful immigrants who contribute billions in taxes into the legally unemployable. The strains to our healthcare system. The answer? Turn the insured into the uninsured. 

“This approach is many things,” the judge concluded—”in the public interest is not one of them.” 


Federal agents had informed local police in the Chicago suburb that of Broadview that they should prepare for an increase in the use of chemical agents and ICE activity and that it was “going to be a shitshow.” The parties had divergent takes on what was occurring on the ground. The judge tried to tease out the truth. She noted “a troubling trend of Defendants’ declarants equating protests with riots and a lack of appreciation for the wide spectrum that exists between citizens who are observing, questioning, and criticizing their government, and those who are obstructing, assaulting, or doing violence.” 

“The lens through which we view the world changes our perception of the events around us,” she reasoned. Law enforcement officers who go into an event expecting ‘a shitshow’ are much more likely to experience one than those who go into the event prepared to de-escalate it…This indicates to the Court both bias and lack of objectivity.” 

The final straw for the judge was to remind the Trump lawyers who’d repeatedly referred to the idea that protestors who wear gas masks are demonstrating a desire to do physical violence to law enforcement, even when pressed by the Court that masks are protective equipment, not offensive weapons.” 

Presumably, she added, Trump’s lawyers don’t believe that the CBP officers who have engaged in street patrols in and around Chicago are also demonstrating a desire to do physical violence, though they are both wearing masks and carrying weapons. Additionally, the judge noted that despite the claim that protestors are wearing gas masks, most of the photos submitted by agents showed protesters wearing Covid-19 masks. 

Let’s not leave out Federal Judge Robert Gettleman who addressed the conditions in the ICE detention facility in Broadview. He described conditions for detainees as “sleeping shoulder to shoulder next to filthy toilets that are overflowing, surrounded by human waste. It’s just unacceptable.” 

We take you now across the country to Portland, Oregon and Federal Judge Karin J. Immergut who took judicial notice that in Sept. 2025, Trump posted a message on his Truth Social account stating that he was directing Pete Hegseth, the Secretary of War, to provide troops to protect “War ravaged Portland” from “Antifa, and other domestic terrorists” and authorizing “Full Force, if necessary.” 

She concluded: “This country has a longstanding and foundational tradition of resistance to government overreach, especially in the form of military intrusion into civil affairs…This historical tradition boils down to a simple proposition: this is a nation of Constitutional law, not martial law. Defendants have made a range of arguments that, if accepted, risk blurring the line between civil and military federal power—to the detriment of this nation.” 

For now, we’ll give Federal Judge William Young the last words. A good thing too because his opinion ran 161 pages. Ostensibly the case was about the deportation of non-citizen activists at colleges. 

Judge Young wrote that Trump “ignores everything…The Constitution, our civil laws, regulations, mores, customs, practices, courtesies – all of it; the President simply ignores it all when he takes it into his head to act.” The judge apparently had been holding it in: “While the President naturally seeks warm cheering and gladsome, welcoming acceptance of his views, in the real world he’ll settle for sullen silence and obedience. What he will not countenance is dissent or disagreement.” 

“From the start of his political career, demonizing immigrants has been Trump’s stock in trade. Since his return to office, he has been unusually aggressive in his campaign to round up, detain and deport people whose citizenship status is questionable, and, in some cases, citizens have been caught up in the dragnet. The administration has repeatedly violated the constitution by targeting people because of how they look or the sound of their accents. It has even singled them out because of what they have said or written.” 

Since I wrote this, yet another case coursed through the courts. 

Federal Judge Richard J. Leon barred Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth from enforcing a censure against Kelly over comments that the Arizona Democrat made in a social media video that reminded service members that they can refuse illegal orders. 

“This Court has all it needs to conclude that Defendants have trampled on Senator Kelly’s First Amendment freedoms and threatened the constitutional liberties of millions of military retirees,” Judge Leon wrote in a 29-page opinion. 

He continued, “Rather than trying to shrink the First Amendment liberties of retired service members, Secretary Hegseth and his fellow Defendants might reflect and be grateful for the wisdom and expertise that retired servicemembers have brought to public discussions and debate on military matters in our Nation over the past 250 years. If so, they will more fully appreciate why the Founding Fathers made free speech the first Amendment in the Bill of Rights!” 

The judge threw hypocrisy right back in the faces of Trump and his team by citing remarks from a speech Hegseth gave in 2016: “If you’re doing something that is just completely unlawful and ruthless, then there is a consequence for that. That’s why the military said it won’t follow unlawful orders from their commander in chief. … There’s a belief that we are above what so many things that our enemies or others would do.” 

In case you’re curious or conspiratorial, the judges, in order of appearance in this essay, were appointed to the federal bench by…Presidents Clinton, Reagan, Clinton, Biden, Biden, Clinton, Trump, Reagan and George W. Bush. 

The MAGA right likes to invoke “Trump Derangement Syndrome” to call out negative reactions to Trump, his policies and his cronies. Trump likes to say he tells it like it is.


Thankfully, there are still judges who recognize wherein the derangement syndrome lies and who are willing to tell Trump and his team that what they do is tell it like they don’t care what is. What they actually tell is whitewash. They the judges and we the people are all that are left to hold them accountable. 

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Friday, January 30, 2026

Sinners who brandish the torch: Keep an eye on Philly as you keep Minneapolis in your line of vision

         [The original version of this blog can be found on Substack here.]                                                                                                                                                                                                      Jan. 30, 2026 

[Update: On Presidents Day, Federal Judge Cynthia Rufe, ruled that the exhibit about nine people enslaved by George Washington must be restored at his former home in Philadelphia (see details below). The Trump administration had taken it down last month. Judge Rufe’s ruling was yet another stinging judicial slap at Trump’s decision making.

“As if the Ministry of Truth in George Orwell’s 1984 now existed, with its motto ‘Ignorance is Strength,’ this Court is now asked to determine whether the federal government has the power it claims—to dissemble and disassemble historical truths when it has some domain over historical facts.” The judge, an appointee of George W. Bush concluded, “It does not.” The Trump administration immediately appealed.]

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We watched the movie “Sinners” last week, and as we often do after movies, we consulted reviews and stories on the web. “Sinners” has been nominated for 16 academy awards, the most ever in the history of the Oscars. Its storyline is described as a Southern Gothic horror about twin Black gangsters, returning to the Jim Crow South in the 1930s to open a juke joint in the face of supernatural evil personified by vampires. 

With music and dance as driving elements, it explores themes of race, culture, generational trauma and struggles for Black freedom and identity. It represents survival, resilience, and the adaptation to modern life while honoring one’s roots. 

Not quite the movie I’d expect Trump and MAGAs to promote for Oscars. 

The scene of the exuberant opening night of the juke joint reminded me of the wedding scene in Fiddler on the Roof. In Fiddler, the wedding’s Kabbalistic frenzy is accentuated by the flamboyant Kasotsky dancing of neighborly Russians. Only to be jarringly engulfed by Russian Cossack vigilantes on horseback who torch the venue, ushering in a pogrom. 

In “Sinners,” neighborly, but zombie-looking whites preach love as they try to add their music to the festivities. Only to emerge as vampires who literally and figuratively suck the blood from the community before torching the venue. 


The final scene in Fiddler is of Tevye pulling the family pushcart during the exodus from Anatevka. Behind him, a mystical fiddler is prancing along, symbolizing the precarious balance of playing music on a roof or in a diaspora in the generational commitment to maintaining cultural traditions while navigating a rapidly changing, often hostile world.

The final scene in “Sinners” is of Chicago blues legend Buddy Guy who symbolizes the resilience that honoring one’s roots can be the enduring antidote to generational trauma that at best enjoys latency periods. 


Music is a tie that binds Jews, blacks and others whose identities are generationally attacked and smothered. As is legacy and oral history. They are more indelible especially when history itself is being erased and whitewashed by a process of elimination. For fellow Jews who are seduced by the Trumpian horse goose steps against anti-semitism, you might want to keep any eye on Philadelphia as you keep Minneapolis in your line of vision. 

In Philly at the corner of 6th and Market Streets sits the President’s House, a short walk from Independence Hall. They are being prepped for the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence later in the year. The outdoor exhibit at the President’s House entitled “Freedom and Slavery in the Making of a New Nation” depicts how Presidents Washington and Adams, and their households, once lived and worked at a house on the site. 

[President’s House at night - Click here to view a gallery of the site] 

Though the house was demolished in 1832, it’s being preserved through videos shared from the perspective of nine enslaved individuals who lived and worked here. That is, until the other day when an intrepid band of marauding federal officials (no relation to ICE or Homeland Security as far as I know) began removing exhibit panels at the behest of yet another Trump Executive Order, ironically entitled “Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History.” 


National Park Service workers removing exhibit panels [Click here for the ABC News story

Philly, the city of Brotherly Litigation, filed suit last week to keep the exhibits from being taken down. 

So far, there’s no indication that Trump and his National Park Service erasure teams have torched the exhibits. After all, the park service teams aren’t wearing masks to cloak their identities. Torchings may be the most visually incendiary tools of intimidation and subjugation, but why brandish torches and hide behind masks when a smokescreen of restoration and truth social can get the whitewashing done? 

If all goes according to Trumpian plan, before we know it, there will have been no slavery in the U.S., no Jim Crow, and no nine slaves living and working in the President’s House alongside Presidents Washington and Adams. Anti-semitism will have existed only in the service of extortion, and no immigrants will have soiled the gene pool and polluted the electorate. 

At least then, as Lee Greenwood sings for Trump, I could be proud to be an American.

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