Surviving Trump. Saving America

The Threat to the First Amendment -- What Government Control of the Press Does to Journalism and Democracy

24 min · I går
episode The Threat to the First Amendment -- What Government Control of the Press Does to Journalism and Democracy cover

Beskrivelse

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/fan_mail/new] Episode Summary Before dawn on January 14, 2026, FBI agents arrived at the Alexandria, Virginia home of Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson. They seized two laptops, her phone, an audio recorder, and an external hard drive containing her reporting materials. Her devices remained in government custody for weeks while courts fought over whether federal investigators could even look at them. Natanson covers the Trump administration’s transformation of the federal government — the removal of career civil servants, the politicization of agencies, the dismantling of oversight. That is the story this administration most wants kept quiet. The First Amendment was still on the books that morning. It didn’t stop the knock on the door. Episode 28 documented two tools the administration is using to silence the press. This episode adds a third tool- controlling access to the president- and another more ominous threat- criminal prosecution.  Together we expose what these tools are doing — to journalism, to democracy, and to the American people.   What’s in This Episode • Controlling who gets in the room: On February 25, 2025, the White House ended a century-old precedent and took control of which journalists get access to the president. The Associated Press was banned the same day for refusing to rename the Gulf of Mexico. At the Pentagon, Pete Hegseth issued 21 pages of credentialing rules requiring journalists to publish only information approved for release by the Defense Department. More than thirty major news organizations — the Times, the Post, the Journal, CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN, NPR — surrendered their badges rather than sign. The desks they vacated were filled by LOOMERED, Gateway Pundit, LindellTV, and Turning Point affiliates. • Criminal prosecution as the escalation: In April 2026, Trump explicitly threatened to jail journalists who refused to reveal confidential sources on Iran war reporting. Catherine Herridge — a veteran national security correspondent — remains under a standing legal threat, facing fines or jail time for every day she continues to protect a source. The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press litigated more than 120 matters in 2025 to protect journalists from government pressure — a record high. The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker documented 32 journalists detained or charged while covering protests in the same year. • What it does to the public: Four distinct responses are emerging among Americans — active embrace of the administration’s narrative, passive acceptance by default, full withdrawal from news entirely, and a resistance movement moving toward independent journalism. None of them share a common information reality. Gallup finds only 28 percent of Americans now trust mainstream media — down from 72 percent in the 1970s. Among Republicans, that figure has collapsed to 8 percent. When four separate information ecosystems exist simultaneously, democratic deliberation becomes impossible. • The Project 2025 blueprint: The Mandate for Leadership is explicit: no legal entitlement for journalists to White House or military access, defund public media, tighten presidential control over the FCC, treat press access as a discretionary privilege. PEN America assessed those proposals and concluded they could create a world in which government censors dominate and government propaganda reigns. This episode shows what that world is beginning to look like. • The authoritarian playbook: Authoritarian governments don’t begin by banning the press. They begin by controlling it. Putin transferred ownership of Russia’s major television networks to state-aligned oligarchs. Orbán used government advertising to starve independent outlets until loyalists could buy them. In both cases the press didn’t disappear. It was replaced. The tools are different in each country. The outcome is the same. • Who pays the highest price: When the press is captured, the stories that disappear first are the ones about Black Americans killed during raids, immigrants detained without due process, and civil servants fired for refusing unlawful orders. These communities depend on journalism to make their treatment visible to the broader public. Without it, what is done to them goes undocumented, unchallenged, and unknown.   Why It Matters The First Amendment was written because the Founders understood that a government without a free press is a government without accountability. Every tool documented across these two episodes — the regulatory threats, the billion-dollar lawsuits, the captured press corps, the pre-dawn raids — is aimed at dismantling that accountability. Gradually. Tool by tool. Journalist by journalist. Network by network. The psychological costs are real and measurable. Research documents increased anxiety, social isolation, and what scholars call digital silence — a sense of personal inadequacy when dissenting views have no platform. Lowered civic confidence. A diminished belief that individual participation in democracy changes anything. These are not abstract political consequences. They are measurable harms to millions of people trying to make sense of their country. Mary Walsh spent forty-six years at CBS News. She started under Walter Cronkite. She did not survive being told to aim her reporting at a particular part of the political spectrum. Her farewell memo said one thing: “Honestly, I don’t know how to do that.” She walked out rather than comply. That is what the First Amendment looks like when one person decides it still means something. The First Amendment has never been tested this way before. And the outcome is not guaranteed. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/support] Bella Goode is a pseudonym — but the voice, research, and mission are all real. A Republican turned Democrat advocate in 2016, I was raised by middle class parents in Pennsylvania.  I’m a former marketing executive, entrepreneur, and lifelong learner with an MBA from Wharton and a Master’s in Psychology from Penn. I spent decades telling stories in the business world; now I use those skills to connect the dots in American politics. I’m here because the truth matters — and because the stakes have never been higher. Surviving Trump isn’t lighthearted. It’s clarity, evidence, and a fight for the future of our democracy. Follow my blog on Substack https://survivingtrumppodcast.substack.com [https://bellagoodepodcast.substack.com/]

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episode The Threat to the First Amendment -- What Government Control of the Press Does to Journalism and Democracy cover

The Threat to the First Amendment -- What Government Control of the Press Does to Journalism and Democracy

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/fan_mail/new] Episode Summary Before dawn on January 14, 2026, FBI agents arrived at the Alexandria, Virginia home of Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson. They seized two laptops, her phone, an audio recorder, and an external hard drive containing her reporting materials. Her devices remained in government custody for weeks while courts fought over whether federal investigators could even look at them. Natanson covers the Trump administration’s transformation of the federal government — the removal of career civil servants, the politicization of agencies, the dismantling of oversight. That is the story this administration most wants kept quiet. The First Amendment was still on the books that morning. It didn’t stop the knock on the door. Episode 28 documented two tools the administration is using to silence the press. This episode adds a third tool- controlling access to the president- and another more ominous threat- criminal prosecution.  Together we expose what these tools are doing — to journalism, to democracy, and to the American people.   What’s in This Episode • Controlling who gets in the room: On February 25, 2025, the White House ended a century-old precedent and took control of which journalists get access to the president. The Associated Press was banned the same day for refusing to rename the Gulf of Mexico. At the Pentagon, Pete Hegseth issued 21 pages of credentialing rules requiring journalists to publish only information approved for release by the Defense Department. More than thirty major news organizations — the Times, the Post, the Journal, CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN, NPR — surrendered their badges rather than sign. The desks they vacated were filled by LOOMERED, Gateway Pundit, LindellTV, and Turning Point affiliates. • Criminal prosecution as the escalation: In April 2026, Trump explicitly threatened to jail journalists who refused to reveal confidential sources on Iran war reporting. Catherine Herridge — a veteran national security correspondent — remains under a standing legal threat, facing fines or jail time for every day she continues to protect a source. The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press litigated more than 120 matters in 2025 to protect journalists from government pressure — a record high. The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker documented 32 journalists detained or charged while covering protests in the same year. • What it does to the public: Four distinct responses are emerging among Americans — active embrace of the administration’s narrative, passive acceptance by default, full withdrawal from news entirely, and a resistance movement moving toward independent journalism. None of them share a common information reality. Gallup finds only 28 percent of Americans now trust mainstream media — down from 72 percent in the 1970s. Among Republicans, that figure has collapsed to 8 percent. When four separate information ecosystems exist simultaneously, democratic deliberation becomes impossible. • The Project 2025 blueprint: The Mandate for Leadership is explicit: no legal entitlement for journalists to White House or military access, defund public media, tighten presidential control over the FCC, treat press access as a discretionary privilege. PEN America assessed those proposals and concluded they could create a world in which government censors dominate and government propaganda reigns. This episode shows what that world is beginning to look like. • The authoritarian playbook: Authoritarian governments don’t begin by banning the press. They begin by controlling it. Putin transferred ownership of Russia’s major television networks to state-aligned oligarchs. Orbán used government advertising to starve independent outlets until loyalists could buy them. In both cases the press didn’t disappear. It was replaced. The tools are different in each country. The outcome is the same. • Who pays the highest price: When the press is captured, the stories that disappear first are the ones about Black Americans killed during raids, immigrants detained without due process, and civil servants fired for refusing unlawful orders. These communities depend on journalism to make their treatment visible to the broader public. Without it, what is done to them goes undocumented, unchallenged, and unknown.   Why It Matters The First Amendment was written because the Founders understood that a government without a free press is a government without accountability. Every tool documented across these two episodes — the regulatory threats, the billion-dollar lawsuits, the captured press corps, the pre-dawn raids — is aimed at dismantling that accountability. Gradually. Tool by tool. Journalist by journalist. Network by network. The psychological costs are real and measurable. Research documents increased anxiety, social isolation, and what scholars call digital silence — a sense of personal inadequacy when dissenting views have no platform. Lowered civic confidence. A diminished belief that individual participation in democracy changes anything. These are not abstract political consequences. They are measurable harms to millions of people trying to make sense of their country. Mary Walsh spent forty-six years at CBS News. She started under Walter Cronkite. She did not survive being told to aim her reporting at a particular part of the political spectrum. Her farewell memo said one thing: “Honestly, I don’t know how to do that.” She walked out rather than comply. That is what the First Amendment looks like when one person decides it still means something. The First Amendment has never been tested this way before. And the outcome is not guaranteed. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/support] Bella Goode is a pseudonym — but the voice, research, and mission are all real. A Republican turned Democrat advocate in 2016, I was raised by middle class parents in Pennsylvania.  I’m a former marketing executive, entrepreneur, and lifelong learner with an MBA from Wharton and a Master’s in Psychology from Penn. I spent decades telling stories in the business world; now I use those skills to connect the dots in American politics. I’m here because the truth matters — and because the stakes have never been higher. Surviving Trump isn’t lighthearted. It’s clarity, evidence, and a fight for the future of our democracy. Follow my blog on Substack https://survivingtrumppodcast.substack.com [https://bellagoodepodcast.substack.com/]

I går24 min
episode Controlling the Press: Attacks on Media and How Project 2025 Is Dismantling America’s Communications cover

Controlling the Press: Attacks on Media and How Project 2025 Is Dismantling America’s Communications

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/fan_mail/new] Mary Walsh spent decades at CBS News. She started her career under Walter Cronkite. She survived ownership changes, ratings wars, the collapse of the network news business model, the rise of cable, the rise of streaming. Then in early 2025, she wrote a memo and walked out. Her reason: she had been told to aim CBS News’s reporting at “a particular part of the political spectrum.” She wrote: “Honestly, I don’t know how to do that.” That’s what the end of a free press looks like. Not a bonfire. Not a midnight raid. A memo. A buyout. A resignation.   What’s in This Episode • The blueprint: Project 2025’s Chapter 8 laid out the plan before Trump took office — defund public media, dismantle international broadcasting, reshape the White House press relationship. Brendan Carr wrote the Federal Communications Commission chapter himself • Defunding public media: Congress cut $1.1 billion in Corporation for Public Broadcasting funding in August 2025. The backbone of PBS, NPR, and more than 1,500 local stations since 1967 voted to dissolve itself rather than be used as a political weapon • Silencing Voice of America: on March 15, 2025, more than 1,000 journalists were locked out and placed on administrative leave. For the first time in eighty years, Voice of America went silent — taking with it the legal backing for nine journalists imprisoned abroad • Suing the press into silence: ABC settled for $16 million. CBS settled for $16 million. The New York Times faces $15 billion. The weapon isn’t the verdict — it’s the process. Make the legal costs high enough and newsrooms start making editorial decisions based on what their lawyers will defend • Controlling the press pool: on February 25, 2025, the White House announced it would decide which journalists get access to the president. The Associated Press was banned for refusing to call the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America. Reporters from Gateway Pundit took their place • Why this connects to the season’s central argument: a free press is not equally valuable to all political projects. It is specifically valuable to the communities whose stories would otherwise go untold. Controlling it is how you keep people from knowing what is being done in their name   Why It Matters The First Amendment still exists. The press is still nominally free. What has changed is the cost of exercising that freedom — measured in pulled segments, settled lawsuits, padlocked newsrooms, and career journalists writing memos that say: I don’t know how to do this anymore. Episodes 23 through 27 documented how this administration captured the courts, replaced career experts with loyalists, and gutted independent oversight. Episode 28 documents the final piece of Series 3: controlling what Americans are allowed to read about. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/support] Bella Goode is a pseudonym — but the voice, research, and mission are all real. A Republican turned Democrat advocate in 2016, I was raised by middle class parents in Pennsylvania.  I’m a former marketing executive, entrepreneur, and lifelong learner with an MBA from Wharton and a Master’s in Psychology from Penn. I spent decades telling stories in the business world; now I use those skills to connect the dots in American politics. I’m here because the truth matters — and because the stakes have never been higher. Surviving Trump isn’t lighthearted. It’s clarity, evidence, and a fight for the future of our democracy. Follow my blog on Substack https://survivingtrumppodcast.substack.com [https://bellagoodepodcast.substack.com/]

2. juli 202622 min
episode WHEN NO ONE IS WATCHING How the Administration Dismantled the Inspectors General — the Watchdogs Built to Hold Government Accountable cover

WHEN NO ONE IS WATCHING How the Administration Dismantled the Inspectors General — the Watchdogs Built to Hold Government Accountable

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/fan_mail/new] On January 24, 2025, the Trump administration fired seventeen federal inspectors general by email. Two sentences. No cause given. No thirty days' notice to Congress, as the law requires. This episode documents how the administration has systematically dismantled the independent oversight infrastructure that holds executive power accountable — and what that costs ordinary Americans. What's in This Episode • Who the inspectors general are, what they do, and why Congress built them after Watergate • The six tactics used to dismantle the watchdog system: termination, vacancy, capture, defunding, delegitimization, and obstruction • How the firings followed a pattern — every inspector general with an open investigation into Elon Musk's companies lost their job • The legal case Storch v. Hegseth, Judge Ana Reyes's finding that the firings violated the law, and why the watchdogs are still out • Caz Craffy — the Army financial counselor who stole $3.7 million from Gold Star families, and the inspector general investigation that caught him • Paul Martin — fired the day after his office published a report on $8.2 billion in humanitarian assistance with no one left to monitor it • Kristi Noem's Department of Homeland Security blocking eleven active investigations, including a criminal matter   Why It Matters  The inspectors general were not removed because they failed at their jobs. They were removed because they did them. Their investigations documented racial discrimination in federal hiring, disparate use of force against Black motorists, and systemic racism complaints at the VA. Those investigations are now closed, captured, or blocked. The laws that were supposed to protect equal treatment remain on the books. The institutions responsible for enforcing them have been dismantled. That is this administration's agenda.  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/support] Bella Goode is a pseudonym — but the voice, research, and mission are all real. A Republican turned Democrat advocate in 2016, I was raised by middle class parents in Pennsylvania.  I’m a former marketing executive, entrepreneur, and lifelong learner with an MBA from Wharton and a Master’s in Psychology from Penn. I spent decades telling stories in the business world; now I use those skills to connect the dots in American politics. I’m here because the truth matters — and because the stakes have never been higher. Surviving Trump isn’t lighthearted. It’s clarity, evidence, and a fight for the future of our democracy. Follow my blog on Substack https://survivingtrumppodcast.substack.com [https://bellagoodepodcast.substack.com/]

25. juni 202627 min
episode Firing the Experts: How Schedule F and Project 2025 Are Replacing Government Career Staff with Political Loyalists cover

Firing the Experts: How Schedule F and Project 2025 Are Replacing Government Career Staff with Political Loyalists

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/fan_mail/new] Ryan Schwank spent years training ICE officers. He taught them the use of force. He taught them constitutional law. He taught them the difference between a lawful order and an unlawful one. In January 2026, he filed an anonymous whistleblower complaint with Congress. He alleged that ICE training had been cut from 72 days to 42. That the class on the constitutional rights of protesters had been reduced from two hours to ten minutes. That a directive had authorized agents to enter homes without judicial warrants. That thousands of new recruits were being sent into the field without the legal foundation to recognize an unlawful order when they received one. On February 13, 2026, he resigned. Three weeks later, he testified before Congress under his own name. His closing line: “That should scare everyone.” This episode is about what happens when you remove everyone in the federal government whose job is to say: this is illegal, this is wrong, this will cause harm — and replace them with loyalists, people whose job is to serve the President. What’s in the episode:   • Schedule F — reinstated by Executive Order 14171 on January 20, 2025 — reclassifies up to 50,000 federal employees as at-will workers, stripping them of the civil service protections that currently prevent politically motivated firing. •  a database of more than 20,000 ideologically vetted candidates and a training academy to prepare them for government roles under Trump before they arrived. • Russell Vought described his goal for career federal workers directly: "We want to put them in trauma." • The Guardian, analyzing a leaked database of Project 2025 applications, found that multiple applicants now serving in government cited a Nazi-era legal theorist as their primary intellectual influence. • By August 2025, Black federal employees had seen significant workforce reductions, with Black women experiencing a 25 percent decline. Project 2025 proposes eliminating the federal data collection that tracks employment by race — making the discrimination harder to document and nearly impossible to challenge legally. Why It Matters The merit-based civil service is not just an employment system. It is the infrastructure that makes government accountability possible. Career staff write the legal opinions that flag unlawful directives. They file the formal objections that create a record of what happened. They produce the findings that oversight bodies and courts depend on. When those people are replaced by loyalists whose job security depends on not raising objections, that infrastructure stops functioning — not because the laws changed, but because the people whose job was to enforce them are gone. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/support] Bella Goode is a pseudonym — but the voice, research, and mission are all real. A Republican turned Democrat advocate in 2016, I was raised by middle class parents in Pennsylvania.  I’m a former marketing executive, entrepreneur, and lifelong learner with an MBA from Wharton and a Master’s in Psychology from Penn. I spent decades telling stories in the business world; now I use those skills to connect the dots in American politics. I’m here because the truth matters — and because the stakes have never been higher. Surviving Trump isn’t lighthearted. It’s clarity, evidence, and a fight for the future of our democracy. Follow my blog on Substack https://survivingtrumppodcast.substack.com [https://bellagoodepodcast.substack.com/]

18. juni 202634 min
episode Who Justice Pursues — And Who It Protects: When the Justice Department Serves the King Instead of the People cover

Who Justice Pursues — And Who It Protects: When the Justice Department Serves the King Instead of the People

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/fan_mail/new] He survived a roadside bomb in Afghanistan. He came home with a Purple Heart and post-traumatic stress disorder. On June 11, 2025, he joined a protest outside a federal immigration facility in Spokane, Washington. More than a month later, FBI agents arrived at his door at six in the morning, rifles drawn, and arrested him on federal conspiracy charges. If convicted, Bajun Mavalwalla faces up to six years in prison. Meanwhile, the leaders of groups convicted of plotting to stop the peaceful transfer of power by force are having their guilty verdicts erased. The Justice Department calls the original prosecutions weaponized. It is moving to make sure those cases can never be brought again. This episode is about that contrast — and what it tells us about a Justice Department that no longer answers to the law.  What This Episode Covers • Erik Siebert, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, forced out in September 2025 after refusing to bring charges against James Comey and Letitia James — two people the president wanted prosecuted. His replacement: one of Trump’s personal attorneys with no prior prosecutorial experience. • Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, who served as Trump’s criminal defense counsel in the 2024 hush-money trial and has publicly described Trump as his “boss” — and what that means for every charging decision the department now makes. • National Security Presidential Memorandum 7: the presidential directive that defines federal prosecution targets by ideology — anti-capitalism, anti-Christianity, hostility toward traditional American views on family, religion, and morality — and tells prosecutors to go big and go loud. • Kat Abughazaleh, a 26-year-old Democratic congressional candidate, selected from a crowd of fifty to a hundred people and charged with federal felony conspiracy. Prosecutors later admitted there was no advance planning and no pre existing agreement — their theory was a “spontaneous conspiracy” that formed the moment the protest began. • More than one and a half billion dollars in restitution owed to fraud victims — investors, employees, Native American tribes — wiped out through pardons that followed donations, fundraiser checks, and political connections to Trump’s inner circle. Why It Matters The statutes haven’t changed. Conspiracy, obstruction, fraud, terrorism — the language in the federal criminal code is mostly the same as it was five years ago. What has changed is how those laws are being used: what conduct is treated as an intolerable threat to public order, and what conduct is excused as the understandable actions of the right people. This is not a Justice Department that serves the public. It serves the president. And the template it is building — loyalty tests for new prosecutors, personal attorneys installed in career positions, ideology as the starting point for investigations — does not disappear when administrations change. It gets inherited. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455246/support] Bella Goode is a pseudonym — but the voice, research, and mission are all real. A Republican turned Democrat advocate in 2016, I was raised by middle class parents in Pennsylvania.  I’m a former marketing executive, entrepreneur, and lifelong learner with an MBA from Wharton and a Master’s in Psychology from Penn. I spent decades telling stories in the business world; now I use those skills to connect the dots in American politics. I’m here because the truth matters — and because the stakes have never been higher. Surviving Trump isn’t lighthearted. It’s clarity, evidence, and a fight for the future of our democracy. Follow my blog on Substack https://survivingtrumppodcast.substack.com [https://bellagoodepodcast.substack.com/]

11. juni 202632 min