Monday, February 17, 2025

The U.S. is Now Far Too Musky

You know the word musty (having a stale, moldy, or damp smell) and also perhaps the term musky (having an odor of or resembling musk). But I am writing here about Musky (referring to Elon Musk). 

Timothy Snyder is a scholar worth knowing about and taking seriously.  He is an American historian and a professor of History at Yale University. During Trump’s first year as POTUS in 2017, Snyder (b. 1969) published On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century.

Snyder’s book is a short one about how to prevent a democracy from becoming a tyranny (such as Italy did in the 1920s and Germany did in the 1930s) with a focus on modern United States politics and on what he calls "America's turn towards authoritarianism."*1

On the first page of the Prologue, Snyder states that tyranny means “the usurpation of power by a single individual or group, or the circumvention of law by rulers for their own benefit.”

Snyder now posts regularly on Substack, and “Of course it’s a coup” is the title of his February 5 post, which can be accessed here. In that post, he asserts,

The ongoing actions by Musk and his followers are a coup because the individuals seizing power have no right to it. Elon Musk was elected to no office and there is no office that would give him the authority to do what he is doing. It is all illegal. It is also a coup in its intended effects: to undo democratic practice and violate human rights.*2

Snyder goes on to say, “President Trump … will also perform at Musk’s pleasure. There is not much he can do without the use of the federal government’s computers.”

Some are saying, correctly it seems, that Trump is a PINO (President in name only), and now U.S. executive power is really in Musk’s hands. Time magazine’s recent provocative "cover" puts Elon Musk behind Trump’s desk. 

So, this is why I am saying that the U.S. is now too Musky. While perhaps no one else is using that last word, there are a multitude of Democrats and an appallingly few Republicans who agree with my assessment.

Elon Musk needs little introduction, but there is much about him that most of us don’t know. Briefly, he was born in South Africa (in 1971) and became a citizen of Canada in 1989 and of the U.S. in 2002. He has been married and divorced twice and has fathered 12 children with three women.*3

Until recently, Musk has been best known for founding (in 2002) and being the CEO of SpaceX, for being the CEO of Tesla, Inc. (since 2008), and for being the owner of Twitter (which he bought in 2022 and changed the name to X in 2023).

Also, as is widely known, Musk is considered the wealthiest man in the world with an estimated net worth of over 40 billion US dollars. And now he has become the most powerful person in the U.S. federal government other than (or even more than?) the President.

Musk’s political power comes from his being the head of DOGE (The Department of Government Efficiency). DOGE is not a Cabinet-level department; it is, rather, a temporary contracted government organization created by President Trump’s executive order on the day he was inaugurated.

According to Wikipedia, “DOGE's stated purpose is to reduce wasteful and fraudulent federal spending, and eliminate excessive regulations.” Further, it was “created to ‘modernize federal technology and software to maximize governmental efficiency and productivity.’" 

On February 11, the President hosted reporters in the Oval Office, but as Heather Cox Richardson reported, “Elon Musk held center stage,” for the event was Trump signing another executive order, this one essentially putting DOGE in charge of the U.S. government. 

Having someone other than the President in charge of the government and dismissing the place of Congress certainly sounds like it is a coup. In a lengthy, informative piece by eminent journalist Anne Applebaum (b. 1964) in the January 14 issue of The Atlantic (see here), Musk is leading a “regime change.”

If these assertions about the U.S. now experiencing a coup or an illegal regime change are true, which I’m afraid are accurate, surely it is also accurate to say that the U.S. is now too Musky! Aren’t we going to speak out forcefully against that?! 

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 *1 That book topped The New York Times bestseller list for paperback nonfiction in 2017 and remained on bestseller lists as late as 2021. On March 12, the Vital Conversations group in Kansas City's Northland will discuss tyranny, using Snyder's book as the basis for conversation. (Those of you who live in the area are invited to attend this gathering which meets in the Antioch branch of the Mid-Continent Public Library in Gladstone.)

*2 The day before Snyder made his post, Joyce Vance (whose husband is no kin to VP Vance) posted Is It Really a Coup? on her Substack blog (titled Civil Discourse with Joyce Vance). On February 12 her post was titled Call it what it is, reiterating that what Musk is doing through DOGE is, indeed, a coup.

*3 Actually, he married and divorced his second wife twice. In 2020, his “romantic partner” gave birth to a boy they named X Æ A-Xii. On February 11, “Lil X” (as his father calls him) was pictured with his father and the President in the Oval Office.

21 comments:

  1. I just now saw this headline in this morning's Washington Post: "Musk’s DOGE seeks access to personal taxpayer data, raising alarm at IRS."

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  2. The first comments received this morning are from a Thinking Friend who lives just a few minutes (by car) from where June and I live. I greatly appreciate her kind, supportive words and the challenge she presents to all of us like-minded people.

    "I love that you, a wonderful writer and chronicler of our times in light of scripture, take issue in print of what Musk and Trump are doing to our dear country. We who share your insights need be there for one another. Like one huge support group to find direction through the ugly fog they have spread across our land and into the heads of half America! Thanks, Leroy. Let’s persist!"

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    1. Sue Wright is this TF, and I should have identified her in posting her comments. She is an active member of Second Baptist Church, where June and I first met her and became friends with her.

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  3. Bob Southard, a Thinking Friends who lives in the Kansas City metropolitan area, calls for action and not just words:

    "I suppose ‘too Musky’ is lightly helpful but the missing piece is the plan for defuming the room. A brave start would be making noise suggesting congress vote for an immediate DOGE closure, a public cry for the courts and Congress to do their jobs to stop the Stench, encourage the rich with a conscience to stop buying Teslas and the poor to start a boycott of Tesla and do public fumigating protests and use X to organize the protests. When you smell a skunk in your (white) house, you can discuss the smell or find a way to get it out."

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    1. Thanks for your pertinent comments, Bob, but I am a bit perturbed that you found my blog post only "lightly helpful." My closing line was, "Aren’t we going to speak out forcefully against that?!" I don't know anybody who owns a Tesla and I doubt that encouraging the poor to start a boycott of Tesla would do much to change the dire situation the country is in now. I do think that speaking out, seeking to get more and more people to understand and to voice opposition to the current condition of the country surely has some merit.

      As an old man who no longer can personally participate in public protests, I can at least speak out, which is what I attempted to do this morning--and I will be linking to this blog post on Facebook repeatedly this week.

      Do you know about 50501? Yesterday at Rainbow Mennonite Church, Thinking Friend Karen U., who is a member there as June and I are, made an appeal (during announcement time at the close of the worship service) for people of the church to join in the local and statewide activities of 50501.

      According to Wikipedia, 50501, which stands for "50 protests, 50 states, one movement," was organized on February 5 in opposition to Donald Trump, Elon Musk, and Project 2025. Through street protests, boycotts, and strike actions their goal is the resignation of Donald Trump and Elon Musk. Some 50501 members in the Kansas City area will be going to Topeka or Jefferson City to protest today. So I hope you will help defume the White House by supporting and perhaps joining the work of the local participatents in 50501.

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    2. participants (not participatents) in the last line. (Sorry for the keyboarding error.)

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  4. I wonder what it will take to change minds and emotions on the matter of DT and the Techno-Grifter, DT's Rasputin, among other things. Did DT voters really intend this? I worry about the federal paralysis following the January 6 attempted coup, the failure of the judiciary to act when the evidence had DT dead to rights, and the unrelenting, torrential wall of corporate and independent media lies (ongoing full blast right now) that denied the reality of the "test coup", and how many folk still have their minds superglued to the savior-myth of the DT presidency. I really think the T-ian "majority" do not understand, no, not one bit, though they may recognize the first dark glimmerings of the personal loss they--and all of us--face. Worse still, how many folk simply are not paying attention?

    And your theory based on the appearance of things may be just right: the would-be dictator may actually be that unelected, musky fellow, dominating a figurehead. But even AH was lazy, in an arch pseudo-daoistic manner channeling motivation to clever minions. Like the one he controls, for EM there appear to be no moral, ethical, or character guardrails, and he surely does not care about any of us. People and their representatives do need to organize and rise up. Where, oh where, are the true patriots in the Congress?

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    1. Jerry, as I have said before, I really appreciate it when you post comments regarding my blog articles. You help all of us who read your comments to think broader and deeper about the issue(s) being addressed.

      What I can't understand is the virtul absence of Republican lawmakers (with the exception of Sen. McConnell, at least some of the time) having the integrity to stand for the Constitution and the good of the general public and against the move toward the an authoritarian government with a non-elected head of state. Surely before long there is going to be some push back from at least a few GOP Senators and Representatives, enough that with the near majority Democrats the coup/regime change can be curtailed.

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  5. It is indeed a sad Presidents' Day, with an anti-democratic authoritarian in the office who is handing power over to a sociopath. I was somewhat comforted when watching the "Brooks & Capehart" segment of the PBS news hour on Friday (2/14/25), when Brooks indicated quite a bit of confidence in the judiciary to help keep the worst affronts to democracy under check. I hope he is right, and I hope we can have free and fair elections in 2026.

    Here is a link to the Brooks & Capehart segment: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KuoxZS6aM4s

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    1. I appreciate these comments, and l last night I listened to the Brooks & Capehart segment mentioned. But one big concern/worry is what will happen if Trump/Musk ignore what the courts rule. Without the support of Congress, there is nothing the courts can do to enforce their rulings if the executive branch of the government ignores them and the legislative branch doesn't do anything to enforce them--or to impeach the defiant President (even if he may be a PINO).

      (Recently I have become much more positive in my feelings toward Brooks, since he used to be quite conservative, but in this segment I thought Capehart's comments were better.)

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  6. Here (below) is a link to the discussion that Jen Rubin and Heather Cox Richardson had today on the subject of "the broken promise of presidential integrity." Rubin calls today Contrarians' Day rather than Presidents' Day.
    https://contrarian.substack.com/p/jen-rubin-and-heather-cox-richardson

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  7. A few minutes ago, I received the following comments by email from local Thinking Friend Linda Schroeder:

    "Thanks, Leroy. I fully agree. But how do we save our nation without provoking violence?? I’ve been doing peaceful protest for many years but this situation is much scarier."

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    1. Thanks for your comments, Linda. I don't think most people protesting the current administration (of Trump/Musk), such as those working with 50501 (mentioned above), are likely to use violence (at least at this point). But, yes, I also am concerned that the public protests they are engaging in will be violently disrupted by some of the most committed MAGA supporters of Trump/Musk.

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  8. Here (below) is the link to a lengthy New York Times article (posted early this morning) titled, "Elon Musk Is Leading a ‘Hostile Takeover of the Federal Government’."

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/18/opinion/musk-trump-doge-tech.html?unlocked_article_code=1.x04.6PmO.hKE71gNAXqIa&smid=url-share

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  9. Yesterday I received the following comments from local Thinking Friend Don Wilson:

    "My sincere thanks for your email and blog. Excellent as usual! Inspired by your blog I went to ’Substack' and read some of Timothy Snyder's posts. It is frightening and literally jarring to realize the power that Musk has, courtesy of Trump. I listened to an audio version of 'The Logic of Destruction' and feel compelled to recommend it to a number of friends as an "urgent priority” to listen to or to read. Thanks again for this 'nudge' that your work provide to me.

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    1. Thank you, Don, for not only reading the blog post but reading some of Timothy Snyder's posts. I am reading him regularly now and think that he says things that need to be widely heeded. Unfortunately, I'm afraid there are few, if any, MAGA people who read what he writes.

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  10. A couple of hours ago I received these comments from Thinking Friend Michael Olmsted, who is a retired Baptist minister in Springfield, Mo., and a personal friend:

    "Today is the most frightening day our nation has faced in my memory ... where is
    the clear understanding of our nation's history and heritage ... and how have we
    so casually turned away from integrity and freedom?

    "My earliest ancestors came here first from England in the very beginning of America and for generations we have served in the military and tilled the soil for a dream of the future that now seems to be forgotten.

    "Trump is a shameful example of 'America' and the poster child of selfishness that
    quickly grows into a fatal disease that must be treated and eradicated or there will
    be no United States for my grandchildren and beyond.

    "We are not perfect ... but surely we remember those who gave so much for us to
    enjoy freedom and to be an example for the world. I remember those Christmas
    holidays when my dad was in England and Europe, fighting the monster Hitler and
    his supporters. I have met many of those in England who knew my dad and the
    tragedy of those war years and I spoke at one of the annual celebrations that
    included survivors of those harsh days. God help us to see the ugliness and
    tragedy that is unfolding today and God help us to return to integrity, compassion
    and decency."

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    1. Thanks for your heartfelt comments, Michael. I hope many others will join you in your closing prayer, as I do.

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  11. Bro. Leroy, I must force myself to keep this short, but as a beginning, your blog echoes my thoughts perfectly. Musk is in control of the US. I fear he has whispered in the ear of the POTUS what he has said publicly to senators and representatives, "Vote against me and I guarantee I will fund your opposition in the next election." Too many of our people have gone to sleep the way Germany did in the 1930's, the Soviet Union did under Stalin, Russia more recently under Putin, and China has done under Xi. Totalitarianism represents safety, not freedom. Under the dictator one does not have to think. The individual's life is planned and controlled. Trump said in his campaign, "Vote for me and you will never have to vote again." I think he meant "never get to." Will there be mid-term elections? How many ways can the Musk-Trump dictatorship prevent them? Ways may well exist.

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  12. I appreciate your comments, Tom. What you wrote at the end is a serious concern. If the President can declare that some national emergency exists in the summer/fall of 2026, which he may well be able to orchestrate (unintentionally or intentionally), then he might also be able to get congressional approval to suspend the mid-term elections--or he and Musk may just do that without any approval (which would be even worse).

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  13. A relevant article in this morning's Washington Post:
    https://wapo.st/4gKwnNv

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