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Why BestNetTech Is Now A Democracy Blog (Whether We Like It Or Not)

from the it's-the-only-real-story dept

While political reporters are still doing their view-from-nowhere “Democrats say this, Republicans say that” dance, tech and legal journalists have been watching an unfortunately recognizable plan unfold — a playbook we’re all too familiar with. We’ve seen how technology can be wielded to consolidate power, how institutional guardrails can be circumvented through technical and legal workarounds, and how smoke and mirrors claims about “innovation” can mask old-fashioned power grabs. It’s a playbook we watched Musk perfect at Twitter, and now we’re seeing it deployed on a national scale.

Over the last few weeks, I’ve had a few people reach out about our coverage these days. Most have been very supportive of what we’ve been covering (in fact, people have been strongly encouraging us to keep it up), but a few asked questions regarding what BestNetTech is focused on these days, and how much we were leaning into covering “politics.”

When the very institutions that made American innovation possible are being systematically dismantled, it’s not a “political” story anymore. It’s a story about whether the environment that enabled all the other stories we cover will continue to exist.

We’ve always covered the intersection of technology, innovation, and policy (27+ years and counting). Sometimes that meant writing about patents or copyright, sometimes about content moderation, sometimes about privacy. But what happens when the fundamental systems that make all of those conversations possible start breaking down? When the people dismantling those systems aren’t even pretending to replace them with something better?

But there’s more to it than that.

It’s difficult to explain how much it matters that we’ve seen this movie before. (Well, technically, we’ve seen the beta version — what’s happening now is way more troubling.) When you’ve spent years watching how some tech bros break the rules in pursuit of personal and economic power at the expense of safety and user protections, all while wrapping themselves in the flag of “innovation,” you get pretty good at spotting the pattern.

Take two recent stories that perfectly illustrate the difference in coverage. First, there’s the TikTok ban. Political reporters focused on which party would benefit from the ban, and who would get credit for being “tough on China” — the usual horse-race nonsense. Tech and law reporters, meanwhile, were highlighting how the legislation would actually weaken security protections and create dangerous precedents for government intervention in private companies. (Not to mention how it would undermine decades of US work promoting an open internet.)

Or take what’s happening at the FCC right now. The traditional media keeps repeating the claims that Brendan Carr is a “free speech warrior,” because that’s what Donald Trump called him. But if you’ve been covering tech policy for a while, you know full well that Carr isn’t actually a believer in free speech. Quite the opposite.

Carr made it clear he wants to be America’s top censor, but cleverly wrapped it in misleading language about free speech. Inexperienced political reporters just repeated those misleading claims. Then he started doing exactly what he promised: going after companies whose speech he seemed to feel was too supportive of Democrats. And now some of those same media companies who failed to cover Carr accurately are falling in line, caving to threats from the administration.

This is the kind of thing tech and law reporters spot immediately, because we’ve seen this all play out before. When someone talks about “free speech” while actively working to control speech, that’s not a contradiction or a mistake — it’s the point. It’s about consolidating power while wrapping it in the language of freedom as a shield to fool the gullible and the lazy.

This is why it’s been the tech and legal press that have been putting in the work, getting the scoops, and highlighting what’s actually going on, rather than just regurgitation administration propaganda without context or analysis (which hasn’t stopped the administration from punishing them).

Connecting these dots is basically what we do here at BestNetTech.

One of the craziest bits about covering the systematic dismantling of democracy is this: the people doing the dismantling frequently tell you exactly what they’re going to do. They’re almost proud of it. They just wrap it in language that makes it sound like the opposite. (Remember when Musk said he was buying Twitter to protect free speech? And then banned journalists and sued researchers for calling out his nonsense? Same playbook.)

Good reporters can parse that. Bad reporters fail at it time and time again.

But what’s happening now is even more extreme and more terrifying. Something that even experts in democratic collapse didn’t see coming. Normally when democracies fall apart, there’s also a playbook. A series of predictable steps involving the military, or the courts, or sometimes both.

But what’s happening in the US right now is some sort of weird hybrid of the kind of power grabs we’ve seen in the tech industry, combined with a more traditional collapse of democratic institutions.

The destruction is far more systematic and dangerous than many seem to realize. Even Steven Levitsky, the author of How Democracies Die — who has literally written the book on how democracies collapse — admits the speed and scope of America’s institutional collapse has exceeded his worst predictions. And his analysis points to something we’ve been specifically warning about: the unprecedented concentration of political, economic, and technological power in the hands of Elon Musk and his circle of loyal hatchet men as they dismantle democratic guardrails.

We’re pretty screwed. A couple of things are a little worse than I anticipated. One is that while we knew the Republicans would not put up many obstacles, they have been even weaker than I thought. That the Congress is basically shutting itself down in the wake of the executive branch usurping its power is also really stunning. The Republican abdication has been worse than I expected, and I thought it would be bad.

The second thing I didn’t anticipate was the role of Musk. I don’t think anybody quite could have anticipated it. That article drew on 20 years of research on competitive authoritarian regimes elsewhere in the world. The kinds of stuff we predicted, a lot of which has come to pass, are strategies that have been carried out in literally dozens of other cases. But Musk is pretty new. This is something that I don’t really have a model to understand. There’s a sort of technological frontier element to this that’s a little frightening. We don’t know what he’s going to do with data. And frankly, at least in democracies, I’ve never seen a concentration of political, economic, and media power as vast as this.

This is why tech journalism’s perspective is so crucial right now. We’ve spent decades documenting how technology and entrepreneurship can either strengthen or undermine democratic institutions. We understand the dangers of concentrated power in the digital age. And we’ve watched in real-time as tech leaders who once championed innovation and openness now actively work to consolidate control and dismantle the very systems that enabled their success.

I know that some folks in the comments will whine that this is “political” or that it’s an overreaction. And it is true that there have been times in the past when people have overreacted to things happening in DC.

This is not one of those times.

If you do not recognize that mass destruction of fundamental concepts of democracy and the US Constitution happening right now, you are either willfully ignorant or just plain stupid. I can’t put it any clearer than that.

This isn’t about politics — it’s about the systematic dismantling of the very infrastructure that made American innovation possible. For those in the tech industry who supported this administration thinking it would mean less regulation or more “business friendly” policies: you’ve catastrophically misread the situation (which many people tried to warn you about). While overregulation (which, let’s face it, we didn’t really have) can be bad, it’s nothing compared to the destruction of the stable institutional framework that allowed American innovation to thrive in the first place.

There’s something important to understand about innovation. It doesn’t actually happen in a vacuum. The reason Silicon Valley became Silicon Valley wasn’t because a bunch of genius inventors happened to like California weather. It was because of a complex web of institutions that made innovation possible: courts that would enforce contracts (but not non-competes, allowing ideas to spread quickly and freely across industries), universities that shared research, a financial system that could fund new ideas, and laws that let people actually try those ideas out. And surrounding it all: a fairly stable economy, stability in global markets and (more recently) a strong belief in a global open internet.

And now we’re watching Musk, Trump, and their allies destroy these foundations. They operate under the dangerous delusion of the “great man” theory of innovation — the false belief that revolutionary changes come solely from lone geniuses, rather than from the complex interplay of open systems, diverse perspectives, and stable institutions that actually drives progress.

The reality has always been much messier. Innovation happens when lots of different people can try lots of different ideas. When information flows freely. When someone can start a company without worrying that the government will investigate them for criticizing an oligarch. When diverse perspectives can actually contribute to the conversation. You know — all the things that are currently under attack.

But you need a stable economy and stable infrastructure to make that work. And you need an openness to ideas and collaboration and (gasp) diversity to actually getting the most out of people.

There are, of course, other stories happening in the world. And it has been frustrating that we haven’t been able to cover some of the stories we’d normally cover. I have about 700 tabs currently open, many of which contain stories I’d like to write about, some of which might seem closer to traditional BestNetTech subject matter.

But right now, the story that matters most is how the dismantling of American institutions threatens everything else we cover. When the fundamental structures that enable innovation, protect civil liberties, and foster open dialogue are under attack, every other tech policy story becomes secondary.

What we’re witnessing isn’t just another political cycle or policy debate — it’s an organized effort to destroy the very systems that have made American innovation possible. Whether this is by design, or by incompetence, doesn’t much matter (though it’s likely a combination of both). Unlike typical policy fights where we can disagree on the details while working within the system, this attack aims to demolish the system itself.

Remember all those tech CEOs who thought they could control Trump? All those VCs who figured they could profit from chaos? All those business leaders who decided that “woke institutions” were a bigger threat than authoritarian power grabs? They’re learning a very expensive lesson about the difference between creative destruction and just plain destruction.

We’re going to keep covering this story because, frankly, it’s the only story that matters right now, and one that not everyone manages to see clearly. The political press may not understand what’s happening (or may be too afraid to say it out loud), but those of us who’ve spent decades studying how technology and power interact? We see it and we can’t look away.

So, here’s the bottom line: when WaPo’s opinion pages are being gutted and tech CEOs are seeking pre-approval from authoritarians, the line between “tech coverage” and “saving democracy” has basically disappeared. It’s all the same thing.

We’re going to keep doing this work because someone has to. Because understanding how technology and power interact isn’t just an academic exercise anymore — it’s about whether we’ll have an innovation economy left when this is all over.

If you think this kind of coverage matters — if you believe we need voices willing to connect these dots and call out these threats — then help us keep doing it. You can become a Friend of BestNetTech, support us on Patreon, grab some merch, or even back our card game (while it’s still available for pre-order…)

The future of American innovation isn’t just another story we cover. It’s the story. And we’re going to keep telling it, whether the powers that be like it or not.

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Comments on “Why BestNetTech Is Now A Democracy Blog (Whether We Like It Or Not)”

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120 Comments
This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Drew Wilson (user link) says:

Re:

I’ve been calling out the BS for what it is since I started my journalism career in 2005. Built my own site (linked in my name) in 2013 and have been doing this sort of thing ever since. It’s a Canadian perspective to be sure, but I do what I can on my end of things.

Right now, it’s been all about how Trump is trying to erase Canada. The media kept rationalizing Trump by saying that it’s some sort of “negotiating tactic” or that he’s just being “bombastic” – or even that he actually gives a crap about border security between Canada and the US. I called it out for what it was – an attempt to make Canada cease to exist. I’ve been doing it since Trump initially announced that he was going to do this tariff nonsense. Politician’s got it by the time those tariffs were set to take effect last month (before the delay), but it wasn’t until today that the Canadian media has realized that maybe this didn’t have anything to do with the border after all.

So, if you’re looking for a site similar to BestNetTech, you can always check out my site. I end up being on the same wavelength of Mike and his crew a majority of the time (and even write articles from time to time saying that I agree with BestNetTech). I also differentiate the site with plenty of additional coverage that is either not covered on BestNetTech or ends up on BestNetTech sometime later from time to time (after all, we are all independently looking at the issues from different perspectives, so that’s invariably going to happen).

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Thad (profile) says:

Re:

Wired has been pretty much head of the pack at covering Musk’s government takeover.

ProPublica might be the best national news outlet in the country at this point. It’s independent and donation-supported.

404 Media is owned and operated by journalists who were laid off from Motherboard; they’re doing good work in the same tech-oriented vein as BestNetTech and Wired.

You may also want to look into supporting your local paper and your local PBS affiliate. And maybe your local NPR station? I kinda got burned out on mine by one too many “let’s go to a diner and talk to Trump supporters to see if they’re still Trump supporters” Cletus safari, but they’re still better than the for-profit news media.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Sarah Kendzior saw this coming years ago: https://sarahkendzior.substack.com/p/ten-articles-explaining-the-2024

Whitney Webb is worth following as well: https://unlimitedhangout.com/

Both are great journalists, who cite their sources impeccably and draw very few unjustified conclusions.

A warning: they talk about organized crime, and corruption in American agencies. A lot of Americans tend to tune out when those things are connected to politics, for whatever reason.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

They operate under the dangerous delusion of the “great man” theory of innovation — the false belief that revolutionary changes come solely from lone geniuses, rather than from the complex interplay of open systems, diverse perspectives, and stable institutions that actually drives progress.

That fallacious “theory” also tends to posit that the “revolutionary changes” can happen overnight when that isn’t anywhere near the case. As with political and social revolutions, technological revolutions tend to happen slowly over a period of years. Mobile phones didn’t change the way people connected with the world (i.e., the Internet) until the iPhone dropped, and that moment took decades of development in the mobile phone industry to reach. Also, Steve Jobs may have had a vision for the iPhone and all, but he wasn’t the one who designed every last aspect of it, nor was he the sole reason for its success.

The real revolutions don’t take place in the streets or presentation stages. The real revolutions aren’t televised⁠—they’re found in the small changes that add up to the way we change social habits. Just look at how American society has eliminated the “third place” in public life: anti-homeless benches making everyone avoid sitting down in public places because of the discomfort, young people not having places to go out and be themselves without cops showing up to break things up, front porches being replaced with back patios and privacy fences becoming the norm rather than the exception. That shit didn’t happen overnight⁠—they were gradual changes based on multiple social factors and the evolution of our culture into something more divided, polarized, and ultimately tribalistic.

No one “great man” can save us. No one “great man” can fix everything. Anyone who says otherwise is lying, delusional, or trying to pass themselves off as that “great man”. And in the case of Elon Musk, he’s doing all three.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

As with political and social revolutions, technological revolutions tend to happen slowly over a period of years.

Sure, because none of these are really distinct things. Democracy is a technology like any other; 2nd row of the 5th column of the Civ 1 tech tree. And “politics” and “society” are certainly technologies, even if the picture doesn’t show them. They’re dependent on earlier technologies such as language and law, and are intertwined with newer technologies such as banking and industry.

The long history of simultaneous invention should be sufficient to disprove any “lone genius” theory, exactly because invention or discovery usually involves piecing together a few pre-existing ideas. It’s a common argument against patent systems; with the first telephones, for example, multiple inventors were requesting patents within hours of each other.

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Three Men In A Boat (profile) says:

A republic, if you can keep it.

I’m very much reminded of Benjamin Franklin’s pithy response when asked what the result of the Constitutional Convention was. “A republic, if you can keep it.”

I am not over praising you and BestNetTech when I point out that you and Franklin are cut from the same cloth- having finely tuned BS detectors, being unafraid of communicating complexity, and having a visceral appreciation for solutions that have many owners.

We must all hang together, or we will surely hang separately.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Bobson Dugnutt (profile) says:

Re:

Atlantic City is a frightening harbinger of what is to come for the rest of America.

(The bubble burst on Atlantic City as the Las Vegas of the east because flights are cheap and frequent enough to get the real thing in Vegas, plus newer tribal casinos in Connecticut snagged the New York City and New England gambling markets. Not a single Trump-branded Atlantic City property survives today.)

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Arijirija says:

Re: Re:

And that’s what frightened me about the first Trump presidency – nobody took the time to think that if a so-called “businessman” could go bankrupt running a casino, which owns the bank everybody else bets against, what’s he going to do to the country? The rest of the world? He was lucky during the coronavirus pandemic that he hadn’t really got going on his Make America Grate Again project. And people weren’t properly Grate-ful to him. So he’s Grating them again … and Musk is a large part of the Grater.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

nobody took the time to think that if a so-called “businessman” could go bankrupt running a casino, which owns the bank everybody else bets against, what’s he going to do to the country?

Rich business owners use bankruptcy as a strategic move, to get out of debts—getting some short-term gains in exchange for a longer-term reputational hit, although Trump didn’t seem so affected by that. I wouldn’t be surprised if the U.S.A. “declared bankruptcy”; or, in other words, intentionally defaulted on debt. Why not? This tariff business is already destroying the country’s international reputation, and the people in charge don’t seem to mind. Making the country’s economy more insular is exactly what was promised.

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So tolerant says:

Re: Wow, why the vitriol?

The responses to this comment are quite hostile. It feels like all the bullies from grade school congregate here just to get their licks in. (Que comments about my imagined bullied past, right?). All that was expressed was an opinion. No attacks. Why the all the hate? Makes me wonder as to the types this site a attracts.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Fact of the matter is that there is no going back. As Bouie says:

And so the president’s opponents, whoever they are, cannot expect a return to the Constitution as it was. Whatever comes next, should the country weather this attempted hijacking, will need to be a fundamental rethinking of what this system is and what we want out of it.

Anything less will set us up for yet another Trump and yet another Musk.

We’re going to have to do a run-down of everything that failed. The checks and balances in all three branches of government. The Constitution and its Amendments. Find what can still work, and change or throw out what didn’t.

We can’t go back. We have to press forward. That means making changes to how things are done in ways that those tech and law reporters will recoil at. But they’re gonna have to come to the realization that if we’re gonna move forward, we can’t retain the ability for candidates for President & Vice President to, for example, spew lies about Haitian immigrants stealing & eating people’s pets with the intent of getting people to inflict violence and harm on those immigrants, and get away with it.

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Bobson Dugnutt (profile) says:

Re:

Bouie’s idea scales up to world history for the past 80 years.

How did liberal democracy win history for about 60 of those years? When the world was in agreement that “Hitler and the Nazis are bad.” Almost all of the world’s institutions were built on the foundation of making governments, institutions and cultures inhospitable to fascism.

Think about this: After World War II, the victorious Allies made their enemies their friends. Japan and Germany didn’t want to avenge their loss; they had to be occupied and rebuilt to where they could have their industrial economies restored over a generation. That’s what gave rise to globalization. We’re too busy trading and traveling to avenge what happened in the trenches in the 1930s and 1940s.

JMT (profile) says:

Re: Re:

How did liberal democracy win history for about 60 of those years? When the world was in agreement that “Hitler and the Nazis are bad.”

That’s how long it took for the people who directly witnessed it to start dying off in significant numbers. There’s a big difference between a lived experience and watching WW2 movies, and apparently too many people alive today just don’t realize how bad it was.

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ECA (profile) says:

Seen before

Excuse still dealing with Eye surgery.

Iv seen this 1-2 times before. Its a smash and grab. Flash in the pan. Knowing How the gov. is supposed to work, Patches will be installed to cover whats been done. then Kinda reorganize.

But you may never see whats going on in the background. 1 times they changed how congress could/would be run, they changed the rules to befit THEIR side. The Change was during the Off cycle, when Some would come in and Adjust things to work better, but required a Forum. Now you need 1 voice to cancel what is/was being done to Adjust things better.
There have been other Adjustments along the way. Would love to revert congress to the 1970’s forum.

Said before, they are playing with the 0.1% of expenditures, NOT the section that covers over 50%(military) that has 1 of the oldest Mainframes in the nation(IRS has the other). BOTH have been obsolete since the 80’s, and require special programmers, to get things Out of them. Both need to be defunct and Totally NEW, and all the Data transferred and updated, and would take 1-2 years to do the job.
Congress has been trying to get Both, but the Pentagon, cant figure out how, and the IRS cent get the money from congress to do it.
then there is someone incharge of NOAA, that has his own company to compete, since the first Trump installation. And wants NOAA not to compete with his company, but Still NEEDS access to all the equipment NOAA has access to, to get his data.
AND:
https://scontent.fboi1-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t39.30808-6/480902331_10212660811271020_4298085923343053934_n.jpg?stp=cp6_dst-jpg_tt6&_nc_cat=100&ccb=1-7&_nc_sid=833d8c&_nc_ohc=LkEKQTEN3LQQ7kNvgFPugzi&_nc_oc=Adh4bUdwVjbtYhKyODYr2iFi88aQVXR83wyX-_182e_6bscX0wJDNnGsZgICSKB5hCk&_nc_zt=23&_nc_ht=scontent.fboi1-1.fna&_nc_gid=ARuD1oARPWtr5kOsQu1Zyst&oh=00_AYCRiTCWvubUC-tke_9tRXoSz3_UTRe5Gora47g23lqWgA&oe=67CD2FDC

In the End, Elon has figured how to Pat trump on the head and LET him do as Elon suggests. But who is in charge? We dont see Trump gathering him Minions, and discussing what to do and whats happening. Which every president has done before.
On a side note, Elon as a college drop out, gains Citizenship, and has 3 Nationalities. But where did the money come from for him to Jump into 3 different high tech business’s? IMO, he didnt earn it, did he? Or did his Father Add to it? Being smart is 1 thing, being rich is another. It would be interesting to expunge him from the USA back to Canada. Just to see what happens. Cuse as with trump, I dont think he has money left from all he got from the Gov. was required to goto his companies for development.

Drew Wilson (user link) says:

Yeah, I’ve been finding myself doing the same thing for very similar reasons on my site. Trump declared economic war on Canada (and Mexico and China), so the price of literally everything is going to go through the roof soon. The bad trade policies is going to impact literally everyone. As a result, I’m covering all this trade war BS between Canada and the US. Everything is going to trickle down to impacting digital rights and how we experience our digital era. I don’t feel entirely comfortable doing this kind of coverage, but I also know I don’t exactly have any choice in the matter. The stories kind of override a lot of smaller stories in the end.

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Bobson Dugnutt (profile) says:

Free speech = hostage taking

When Mike says:

“This is the kind of thing tech and law reporters spot immediately, because we’ve seen this all play out before. When someone talks about “free speech” while actively working to control speech, that’s not a contradiction or a mistake — it’s the point. It’s about consolidating power while wrapping it in the language of freedom as a shield to fool the gullible and the lazy.

… it’s what I’ve warned as Appeals to free speech are usually moral hostage taking.

I brought it up over the weekend, and Stephen and a couple of ACs elaborated on it.

I note that there’s an important caveat between government action and cultural discourse of free speech that involves ideas outside lawmakers and the courts. The hostage-taking aspect applies to the cultural aspects of speech outside the scope of law.

Well, Brendan Carr is the exception. He actually has political power, and he’s using the power of his office along with the rhetoric of free speech to take hostages to deliver policy wins for Trump.

A person who loves free speech defends free speech out of love. The hostage taker’s love of free speech is at best instrumental — their aim is to extract concessions and control the situation.

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That One Guy (profile) says:

Hard to write articles about the menu on a boat that just sank

When the bedrock upon which everything else rests is being actively undermined it’s not ‘changing the subject’ to focus on that instead of your previous issue(s), rather it’s working to make sure that those issues will still be around so that you can cover them down the line.

Mari says:

Thank you for this important piece. Many of us are going outside our lane because the impacts of 47 administration are just too huge to be silent about.

I also appreciate what Stephen Stone wrote in the comments. Having lived at the same address for 44 years, i have seen exactly those sorts of neighborhood changes happen.

(“The real revolutions aren’t televised⁠—they’re found in the small changes that add up to the way we change social habits. Just look at how American society has eliminated the “third place” in public life: anti-homeless benches making everyone avoid sitting down in public places because of the discomfort, young people not having places to go out and be themselves without cops showing up to break things up, front porches being replaced with back patios and privacy fences becoming the norm rather than the exception. That shit didn’t happen overnight⁠—they were gradual changes based on multiple social factors and the evolution of our culture into something more divided, polarized, and ultimately tribalistic.”)

Ken_L says:

“If you do not recognize that mass destruction of fundamental concepts of democracy and the US Constitution happening right now, you are either willfully ignorant or just plain stupid.”

Many people recognise it but smugly think they’d do better under a different regime. Only some of them are correct.

Too many others, unfortunately, don’t care enough even to look. They simply find the never-ending drama endlessly entertaining.

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That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: 'Of course I support the billionaires, one day soon that'll be me!'

America is filled to the brim with temporarily embarrassed millionaires, people living paycheck to paycheck who are sure that any day now they’ll make it rich and have all the power and as such they identify with and cheer on people who wouldn’t piss on them if they were burning to death right in front of them.

Jesse says:

Re: For the lolz

*Too many others, unfortunately, don’t care enough even to *look. They simply find the never-ending drama endlessly *entertaining.

This has been one of the most chilling things I’ve seen recently. Frequent comments about how ‘entertaining’ it was watching the white house debacle with Zelensky, as if it were a reality TV show with no consequences, not one of the most unfortunate diplomatic incidents in human history.

The ramifications of events like this can affect our country negatively for decades to come, including the potential for devastating economic or military consequences.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

Most of the Democrats in power at the national level will look at that stupid-ass “we brought signs to protest Trump’s speech” and think that was a better plan than, say, either not showing up to the speech or showing up and walking out on the speech. They’re a bunch of feckless idiots who wouldn’t throw a elbow in a fight because they’re too afraid of hurting someone.

Peter Benson says:

Thanks.

The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men (and women) do nothing. Thank you for speaking up.

The rest of us need to call our congresspeople. You don’t have to cuss them out; you just need to let them know you don’t like what you see.

I would personally recommend commenting on the Ukraine betrayal, because I think there are a few GOP congresspeople who are deeply conflicted about that, and so I think it may be a good place to start to turn the tide.

DS says:

Jan 6th, Part 2

Trump uses fentanyl to justify his tariffs. I’m worried he will use fentanyl to justify declaring martial law during Congress’s March recess. When Congress is back in their districts, US Marshalls or martial law means he wont let them back in their offices in. Jan 6th, Part 2.
I’m worried. Or could be wrong.

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Jeff Carter (@pointsnfigures1) (user link) says:

no data

There are only accusations in this piece. no data. Please, if you are going to make accusations, back it up with a link, or an example. Hence it is a blatantly political piece.

We know for a fact that the FBI and CIA worked with companies like Facebook, Google and Twitter to limit, curb, or crush free speech. It is documented and it was the Joe Biden Administration that did it.

Cutting off government payments to media organizations is not limiting free speech if that’s what the author of this speech is implying. It’s forcing an independent media organization to stand on its own two feet and be a business.

No institution is being dismantled (except maybe the Department of Education which needs to be done away with). They are being consolidated and made more efficient. They are also being rinsed of toxic programs like DEI. People are being fired because of bureaucracy bloat, or fired because their sole purpose of leadership wasn’t to actually execute the mission of the organization they led, but to instill some social justice program into it.

The person that is uninformed here and wrong is the author.

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Rocky (profile) says:

Re:

There are only accusations in this piece. no data. Please, if you are going to make accusations, back it up with a link, or an example. Hence it is a blatantly political piece.

You are kind of woefully uninformed, I guess this is your first time here and you couldn’t be bothered to look up prior articles that could have informed you.

We know for a fact that the FBI and CIA worked with companies like Facebook, Google and Twitter to limit, curb, or crush free speech. It is documented and it was the Joe Biden Administration that did it.

You decry the lack of facts, then you argue that “we know for a fact” without supplying said fact. If “we know for a fact” you should have no problem supplying it, right?

And in regards to actual facts, are you familiar with SCOTUS? Somehow they came to the conclusion that this didn’t happen in Murthy v Missouri.

And to use your own words for what you wrote: There are only accusations in this piece. no data. Please, if you are going to make accusations, back it up with a link, or an example. Hence it is a blatantly political piece.

Anonymous Coward says:

I know that I am posting this as annonomas, and few will hear words basicly spoken into the void, but I find the reporting here to have true value. I abandoned Twitter shortly after the Musk take over, and dropped the ‘main stream media’ some time ago. So sites like this, or No Lie on youtube, are the kinds of places I go to stay informed.

Thank you for writing and digging into the weeds and nuance of our modern landscape.

Kevin Jenness says:

I wish someone would explain to me why Doge is intent on destroying the American scientific research establishment. We have a remarkably successful group of institutions doing basic and applied research that has attracted the best scientists and engineers from all over the world and underpins the technological and commercial economy that has allowed people like Musk, Trump and all the billionaires in the Cabinet to be where they are now. I understand the zeal to punish the poors, the blacks and browns, the gays and the libbruls, but is kneecapping science just a way to get back at academia? It seems shortsighted at best.

Phoenix84 (profile) says:

For those in the tech industry who supported this administration thinking it would mean less regulation or more “business friendly” policies: you’ve catastrophically misread the situation (which many people tried to warn you about). While overregulation (which, let’s face it, we didn’t really have) can be bad, it’s nothing compared to the destruction of the stable institutional framework that allowed American innovation to thrive in the first place.

The logging of our national parks helps no one but logging companies. Meanwhile the parks themselves show off the beauty of the states they are in, drawing tourists, both domestic and foreign, and boosting the local economies of the states they’re in, and keep the local ecology functioning and safer than without. Plus they provide non-monetary QOL improvements to the people. For example, I’m proud of the forest land in my state, and fear for the old growth that will be logged out if this continues. We have some of the oldest trees in the nation, and it would be a shame and an insult to lose them.

courts that would enforce contracts (but not non-competes, allowing ideas to spread quickly and freely across industries)

Well, I’ve been against non-competes, but you just made a pretty good case for why they can be bad.

Jesse says:

Re: Noncompetes

I mean, the title says it all. Non-competes are anti-competitive mechanisms and have no place in a real ‘capitalist’ society.

Their primary purpose is to dramatically force down the salaries of laborers who are important or critical to a given company’s operations, by making their value non-transferable and giving the company a ‘monopoly’ on their skills. This in turn takes away most of the employee’s salary bargaining power.

It’s a salary control mechanism, with the added bonus of preventing innovation from expanding outside of your walled corporate garden.

Zoe Veerhoevs says:

Re "democracy" or "democracies"

Any alleged expert or layperson who talks about “democracies” AS IF a real democracy ACTUALLY EXISTS ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD (or has existed at any time in ‘human civilization’) is evidently either a fool who’s repeating mindlessly and blindly the propaganda fed to them since they were a kid and/or is a member of the corrupt establishment minions whose job is to disseminate this total lie because any “democracy” of ‘human civilization’ has always been a covert structure of the rule of a few over the many operating behind the pretense name and facade of a “democracy”: https://www.rolf-hefti.com/covid-19-coronavirus.html

“There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and ITT and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, Union Carbide, and Exxon. Those are the nations of the world today. […]. We no longer live in a world of nations and ideologies […]. The world is a college of corporations, inexorably determined by the immutable laws of business. The world is a business […].” — from the 1976 movie “Network”

“We can either have democracy in this country or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can’t have both.” — Louis Brandeis, Supreme Court Justice

Does anyone still not see how the deadly game on the foolish public is played … or still does not WANT to see it?

Isn’t it about time for anyone to wake up to the ULTIMATE DEPTH of the human rabbit hole — rather than remain blissfully willfully ignorant in a narcissistic fantasy land and play victim like a little child?

“We’ll know our Disinformation Program is complete when everything the American public [and global public] believes is false.” —William Casey, a former CIA director=a leading psychopathic criminal of the genocidal US regime

“Repeating what others say and think is not being awake. Humans have been sold many lies…God, Jesus, Democracy, Money, Education, etc. If you haven’t explored your beliefs about life, then you are not awake.” — E.J. Doyle, songwriter

“Elites are afraid of equality, they are afraid of real democracy, and they are afraid of justice.” —Scott Noble, filmmaker

Anonymous Coward says:

Suggestions?

So.. If one would try to leave in their 2nd half of life with kids just starting post-secondary…

Where’s a good place that’s attainable? Canada is a possibility for some of us (dual-citizens for me, kids, not wife, mother-in-law). Just not sure that leaving CA for Canada isn’t going out of the frying pan into the fire.. Of course, might also buy more time?

Jesse says:

Good on you guys

Nice to see someone in tech calling out what’s going on in this industry as its leaders cozy up to an authoritarian government.

I’d say there’s not much mistake here on their part – they are simply consolidating their positions. They are at the top of their respective industries, and by choosing to work complicitly with an authoritarian government, they can ensure that no competitor ever rises to challenge their market dominance in their respective regimes.

In other words, bog-standard oligarchy.

k-h says:

Culture and stories

After reading Cory Doctorow’s piece on enshittification and watching the broligarchs with Trump, I realize that the whole legal intellectual property movement has been part of a very long ongoing move by big corporations to control our culture and our stories (in the Yuval Noah Harari sense).

The problem is that powerful people want more power.

Is it too late to fix this?

David says:

DOGE is Malware for Democracy

Thank you for the article. It’s crystallized a lot of what’s been going through my head. Especially the parts about this being different from other de-evolutionary events in the last 30 years. This hybrid, hostile takeover is happening at warp speed and it’s unclear how bad it will get or how we will recover.

Kim Andersen says:

Democracy

Vociferous applause for this write up! After unsubscribing to both New York Times and WaPo a year ago, opened my eyes further to the feckless journalism crisis here in the United States. Openly choosing to cover the decline of Democracy that many of us see and discuss, is a brave and courageous choice during these deliberately chaotic times.

Other Jim (profile) says:

Other recommended reading

I’ve read TD for years. I almost never comment because someone else has already said what I want in a better way. Mike, I appreciate the work you and your team are doing. This article was well written.
In other comments, people are recommending other sources for putting what is happening into context. Some of them I’ve read or seen before, and some are new and I can’t wait to check them out.
I also wanted to add a historian I started following, who has some great writing also backed up with sources.

https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/

michele says:

tech media as pro-democracy media

Mike, you make a truly awesome case for why ALL media needs to get its “stuff” together and report what is actually happening behind all the closed doors in the Trump administration and particularly around Musk. It’s a wholesale dismantling of the democratic republic in light speed, like we barely know what hit us (even though, as you point out, the authoritarian players all told us, straight up, what they were intending to do if they got the power back. So few American voters seem to be aware of the end result of what these a-holes are doing that it makes me want to cry and barf at the same time. Keep up the great work, dude! We are behind you all the way. Thanking you and everyone else shouting loud and clear on behalf of our Constitution and our democracy. May the sleep-walking voters and the Democrats who can’t seem to get their freaking act together to make a stand against this abomination wake up, REAL SOON, and DO SOMETHING.

Mark P says:

Thank you! Your post was recommended to me by JVL over at The Bulwark. It is such a breath of fresh air to hear someone come out and exactly what we all know is happening. I’m forwarding this post to everyone I know. We all will have to choose sides at some point, this is not a fight in which anyone will be permitted to remain neutral.

stevecoh1 (profile) says:

Thank you!

I’m very glad to have found BestNetTech.

As a retired software engineer, I have watched in dismay as the Musks, the Thiel, Zuckerbergs, Andreesens et al. have prostrated themselves before Trump. I am grateful that someone from the tech world is opposing this vile trend.

I was an unusual tech. I got into the field at age 35, the age by which it was said that if you hadn’t become a millionaire, you were a failure. Screw that. I liked solving puzzles. And my politics were formed outside of that, during my younger days.

I always regarded software engineering as blue-collar work. The only difference was you didn’t get your hands dirty, a minor point in my view. (And I had previously done real blue-collar work). My career goal was to make a living, not to rule the world.

These assholes see it differently.

I regard tech as a tool. Those who practice it should be respected but not worshipped!

I have a Substack called The Anti-Technopietist. You can and should be technical without needing worship.

Check it out

Chris says:

Dear Mike

You have been right before and you have been wrong before, but one thing I have never seen you be is dishonest.

I wish I thought you were wrong this time. You’re in for a hard fight and your voice is one that I hope survives it. America is going to need it.

I’ll be transferring my recurring support from Kiva and Wikipedia to BestNetTech, and adding some more. While I think those missions are important, your immediate need is more critical. I encourage others to consider options like this.

Good luck.

OrigamiMarie says:

Sometimes the role chooses you

You would’nt have guessed in advance that the National Park Service was going to be a significant resistance leader, but here we are. And I would have hoped for at least one mainstream media group to maintain a spine and cover something besides the horse race / food fight, but here we are. Looks like I should start following and supporting BestNetTech in these trying times.

Florian Mickler says:

Suggestion for coverage

Hi,
In the wake of the current power grab, I think you could cover more critically the tech stacks reliance on cloud servers. I myself am self hosting my email server since 20 years. Looking at it now, Google seems to stand strong, but who knows what will happen with that data.

Cross referencing my emails with my fiscal data might be one of the socially more acceptable misuses of data trust. But I don’t want to imagine what other stuff can be done.

BionicRod (profile) says:

Another site that sees and reports the truth

Thank you for your superb reporting. I want to call attention to an essential site, which was my source for this site: electoral-vote.com. My husband and I have read it for years, and it has consistently provided the best political coverage we have found, linking to its sources and clearly enunciating why it uses some sources and does not use other sources. It is our first and most important read, despite reading the New York Times, the now discredited LA Times, and formerly the Washington Post.

Brad Templeton (user link) says:

Why destroy it

I am frightened, but I remain confused as to why Musk, Theil, Anderssen and others would want to destroy the system that birthed them, the system that sustains them and in which they thrive. They are not fools. They should not fall for the trap of hoping is they kill the system, only they will be left to rule the wasteland. Trump is an easier evil to comprehend, he just wants more glory for Trump. But the silicon valley billionaires want the chance to do more great and cool things new things, and that’s impeded in an autocratic USA. They don’t want to be Jack Ma.

Anonymous Coward says:

I read this and re-read this with a sincere intent to understand it. Perhaps I am daft, but in summary, “our institutions are being dismantled” and “our institutions are needed for innovation.”

I’m not sure there is any support for either point in the article. What institution is being dismantled? Perhaps it is free speech? Perhaps it is the FCC?

In the case of free speech, there are substantial arguments that the Dems have done more to limit speech over the past 10 years than any conservative regime (covid, Hunter Laptop, Biden cognitive decline, gain of function, etc…).

In the case of the FCC, other than ad hominem against its new head, I’m not seeing much there.

Lastly, we can all argue about the “source of innovation” but I’d rather take the single innovator (or small focused team) side versus the innovation via committee. I suspect the entire startup / VC world would be on my side in that one.

Again though, I may be daft, and somehow there’s an argument here that USAID or the Federal Dept of Education is somehow our key source of national innovation.

Anyway, good luck.

americaisarepublicnotamobruledemocracy (profile) says:

Confirmation that the Behind-The-Curtain-Special is still valid!?

Very long time reader, just registered. Wanted to confirm that this offer is still valid:

https://rtb.bestnettech.com/products/behind-the-curtain-special/

Please send confirmation via email as well as a reply to this comment!

Thanks!

America Is A Republic, Not A Mob Rule Democracy!

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