
"Then Frum is joined by the Georgetown law professor and former Pentagon adviser Rosa Brooks, who also served as a D.C. reserve police officer. They discuss Trump's deployment of 2,200 National Guard troops to Washington, D.C.; the limits of militarized policing; constitutional concerns; and the dangers of masked, unidentified federal agents. Brooks warns listeners that such tactics could normalize authoritarian behavior and set troubling precedents for future elections."
"On this episode of The David Frum Show, The Atlantic 's David Frum examines how President Donald Trump's foreign-policy decisions are undermining U.S. alliances and global credibility. He discusses incidents including the detainment of South Korean workers in Georgia and alleged covert operations in Greenland. Frum argues that these actions reflect ego-driven weakness rather than leadership, and explores the broader consequences for America's international standing."
President Donald Trump's foreign-policy decisions are undermining U.S. alliances and global credibility, with incidents including the detainment of South Korean workers in Georgia and alleged covert operations in Greenland. Deployment of 2,200 National Guard troops to Washington, D.C. highlights limits of militarized policing, raises constitutional concerns, and exposes dangers of masked, unidentified federal agents. Such tactics risk normalizing authoritarian behavior and creating troubling precedents for future elections. Mary Shelley's Frankenstein employs unreliable narrators that underscore the importance of critical reading amid declining literacy.
Read at The Atlantic
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