Archer's Line Podcast

The Most Dangerous Word in American Politics

7 min · 17. maj 2026
episode The Most Dangerous Word in American Politics cover

Description

Once again, the President of the United States is accusing journalists of “treason.” This time it happened aboard Air Force One, where Trump lashed out at New York Times reporter David Sanger over reporting on the war in Iran. “I actually think it’s kind of treasonous what you write,” Trump said. Then, moments later, he doubled down. “I actually think it’s treason.” Here’s the whole exchange. I won’t delve into how all the claims the president made about the war have little basis in fact. That’s being covered by other great journalists. The Founding Fathers considered treason so dangerous as a political weapon that they did something extraordinary: they narrowly defined it directly in the Constitution itself. They defined no other crime in our founding document. The Constitution says treason against the United States consists only of “levying war” against the country or “adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort.” That wording was intentional. The founders knew exactly what governments and kings had done with accusations of treason throughout history. They had watched monarchs use it to destroy political enemies, silence critics, imprison dissidents, and intimidate the press. In England, criticizing the crown could become an act of disloyalty. At some points in history, merely suggesting the King might someday die was considered treasonous speech. Under authoritarian governments throughout history, the pattern repeats over and over again. First, the press is accused of bias. Then corruption. And down the list — sabotage, betrayal, and then treason. A free press in a democracy is supposed to challenge power. It’s supposed to be free to ask questions. To hold leaders accountable to the people they’re supposed to be representing. But in authoritarian systems, especially where there are cults of personality, criticism of the leader gradually becomes criticism of the state itself. And criticism of the state becomes betrayal. This isn’t even really about whether Trump personally means it literally. Maybe he does. Maybe he doesn’t. Maybe it’s just anger and impulse and performance, the way so much of modern political rhetoric works. But history shows that language like this changes the atmosphere around journalism. The public starts seeing journalism itself as suspicious, dangerous, and un-American. And once that happens, pressure on the press becomes easier to justify. That pressure can take many forms. Regulatory threats. Lawsuits. Credential revocations. Kicked out of the White House and the Pentagon. Harassment campaigns. Arrests during protests. Ownership pressure. Public threats. Sometimes governments don’t even need to formally censor the press. Fear does the work for them. The most effective authoritarian systems often leave newspapers technically alive while making independent reporting increasingly dangerous, exhausting, expensive, or socially toxic. Russia still has journalists. So does Hungary. So does Turkey. But ask reporters in those countries how free they really are. They won’t be allowed to tell you. John Adams signed the Sedition Act in 1798, making criticism of the federal government punishable by law. Newspapers were targeted. Political opponents were prosecuted. But the backlash to that became so intense that the law helped fuel Adams’ defeat. During World War I, Woodrow Wilson’s administration used the Espionage and Sedition Acts to prosecute dissenters and anti-war activists. Richard Nixon constantly portrayed the press as enemies undermining the country. And yes, authoritarian regimes throughout the twentieth century routinely described independent journalism as treasonous or traitorous. Stalin did it. Hitler did it. Because controlling the narrative always requires discrediting the people who challenge it. And here’s the uncomfortable part. Americans are becoming numb to this language. “Enemy of the people.” “Traitors.” “Anti-American.” “Treasonous.” The words have become part of the background noise of political entertainment — another viral clip, another outrage cycle, another social media battle that burns hot for six hours and disappears. That’s how democratic erosion usually works. And eventually, people stop reacting at all. A president accusing reporters of treason for unfavorable coverage should still sound alarming in the United States of America. Not because journalists are above criticism. They aren’t. But journalism cannot function in a free society if reporting information the government doesn’t like is treated as a betrayal of the country itself. If I were trying to be above all this, I wouldn’t point out that Trump himself spent years attacking Obama and Biden with far harsher language than anything David Sanger wrote about him. He amplified conspiracy theories. He promoted dubious reporting constantly when it benefited him politically. In other words, criticism of political leaders was patriotic right up until the moment the criticism was directed at him. Now it’s “treason.” This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.therobarcher.com/subscribe [https://www.therobarcher.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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