In less than a month we've gone from the Musk/Trump
administration simply saying the quiet part out loud, to unabashedly rubbing it in our faces.
As if claims on other nation's sovereignty -- Greenland, Canada, Panama, Gaza, and most likely
Ukraine -- weren't enough, Musk/Trump have gone full dictatorship mode -- at least in their social media feeds.
First Trump posts a Napoleonic assertion that he's above the law.

And then Musk tweets that the team at CBS' "60 Minutes"
deserves "a long prison sentence" for televising a report on DOGE's dismantling of USAID.

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It's not enough that they are unconstitutionally seizing power, working fast to
dismantle much of our government -- not to mention others -- but the brazen public pronouncements is intended to reinforce their rapid grip, and demonstrate that they are not just above the law, but
above what most Americans would consider reasonable norms.
I'm still convinced that the real damage isn't what they are doing transparently in public, but the ransacking they are doing under
the hood, in private conversations with bad actors -- both foreign and domestic -- but my point is that if they can act with impunity while trolling us, lord knows what else they're up to.
Take Pete Hegseth's shot across the bow -- or was it over the lips and past the gums -- during his NATO press conference Thursday. It circulated on social media, but got nary any pickup in
mainstream press.
It could be, as some social media commenters posed, that the amber liquid Hegseth was drinking was apple juice, but as someone who has thrown one or two back in my time, it
sure looked as if he was sipping a more potent potable less than a month after vowing he would never drink on the job during his Senate confirmation hearings.
Maybe it's just me, but you can
watch the clip above and judge for yourself.
My point is that if the new administration is willing to be so cavalier about such things in public, what are they doing behind-the-scenes.
Something to think about on this Presidents Day, which by next year may very well be renamed Co-Presidents Day, if not something even less American.