Category: Accountability

  • Who’s Going to Tell the Powerful “No?”

    Who’s Going to Tell the Powerful “No?”

    The Supreme Court just handed presidents more power over independent watchdog agencies.

    Some people will tell you this is an argument about constitutional law.

    No.

    It’s an argument about who stands between ordinary people and powerful institutions when something goes wrong.

    There is a reason agencies like the Federal Trade Commission exist.

    There is a reason the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau exists.

    There is a reason we created watchdogs in the first place.

    Because history has already answered the question of what happens when we simply trust powerful people and corporations to police themselves.

    People get hurt.

    Homes are lost.

    Savings disappear.

    Families spend years digging out of holes they never saw coming.

    I’ve watched people walk in believing they just needed a little more time.

    One missed payment.

    Maybe two.

    They thought if they could just catch up next month, everything would be fine.

    That’s not how it works.

    Interest doesn’t stop because life happened.

    The unpaid interest continues to accrue. The balance grows. Fees may be added. The amount needed to become current gets larger while the family’s ability to catch up often gets smaller.

    Suddenly they aren’t trying to make one payment.

    They’re trying to catch two.

    Then three.

    The hole gets deeper every month.

    By the time many people finally ask for help, they aren’t looking for a miracle.

    They’re looking for any option.

    Sometimes there wasn’t one.

    Sometimes the conversation became:

    “I’m sorry… your choices are a short sale, a forbearance agreement if you qualify, or voluntary foreclosure.”

    Those aren’t conversations anyone ever forgets.

    The CFPB wasn’t created because government wanted another agency.

    It was created because millions of Americans learned the hard way what happens when the financial system has too few guardrails and too little accountability.

    The FTC wasn’t created because corporations volunteered to play fair.

    It was created because too many didn’t.

    Independent watchdogs exist for one reason:

    To tell powerful people “No.”

    To tell companies they can’t deceive consumers.

    To tell banks they can’t ignore the rules.

    To tell corporations they can’t simply do whatever makes the most money and worry about the consequences later.

    Today’s Supreme Court decision isn’t just about who gets to fire agency leaders.

    It’s about whether the people responsible for protecting the public can do their jobs without wondering whether keeping those jobs depends on pleasing the people in power.

    Because when watchdogs become less independent, history suggests the people most likely to pay the price aren’t the executives.

    They aren’t the lobbyists.

    They aren’t the politicians.

    They’re the families sitting around the kitchen table wondering how one setback turned into losing everything.

    That’s why watchdogs exist.

    Not because government is perfect.

    Because people aren’t.

    And neither are corporations.

    Scarlett says no.

  • Ron DeSantis Had a Billion Dollars ….

    Ron DeSantis Had a Billion Dollars ….

    He Just Didn’t Spend It on Floridians.

    Every year, Floridians are told to prepare.

    Prepare for another hurricane.

    Prepare for another insurance increase.

    Prepare for higher property taxes.

    Prepare for crowded classrooms.

    Prepare for another year of not being able to afford a home.

    Prepare to do more with less.

    Apparently, the only person in Florida who never has to prepare for a budget shortage is Ron DeSantis.

    Because when he wanted to build immigration detention camps, he somehow found nearly a billion dollars.

    According to a Miami Herald investigation, DeSantis’ administration signed at least 55 contracts worth roughly $1 billion to build and operate two state-run immigration detention facilities, including the Everglades camp his administration proudly called “Alligator Alcatraz.”

    A billion dollars.

    Think about that for a minute.

    A governor who says government spends too much…

    …spent a billion dollars building cages.

    And before anyone says, “Well, they were all dangerous criminals…”

    No.

    Reporting found that hundreds of people detained had no criminal charges. Some had pending asylum claims. Some were seeking lawful permanent residence. Many had jobs, spouses, children, and lives rooted in Florida.

    These weren’t strangers from some distant place.

    Some were Florida’s neighbors.

    Florida’s coworkers.

    Florida’s taxpayers.

    People who helped pay into the very system that ended up locking them behind its fences.

    Read that again.

    Florida taxpayers helped finance a detention system that could be used against other Florida taxpayers.

    If that doesn’t bother you, it should.

    Because history has taught us something over and over again.

    Governments don’t spend a billion dollars building detention systems because they expect to use them once.

    They build them because they plan to use them.

    Today it’s undocumented immigrants.

    Tomorrow it’s someone with Temporary Protected Status.

    Someone whose green card renewal is delayed.

    Someone with a pending asylum case.

    Someone who showed up for an immigration appointment believing they were following the rules.

    Every expansion of government power begins with the promise that it will only be used against those people.

    Until one day…

    Those people become your neighbors.

    Or your coworkers.

    Or your family.

    Or you.

    Meanwhile, back in the real Florida…

    Families are choosing between groceries and homeowners insurance.

    Teachers are buying school supplies with their own money.

    Young adults have given up on buying a home.

    Seniors are wondering how much longer they can afford to stay in theirs.

    Veterans wait for services.

    Communities brace for the next hurricane.

    And somehow we’re told there’s never enough money.

    Really?

    Because when Ron DeSantis wanted a headline, a billion dollars appeared out of thin air.

    Imagine if he’d shown the same urgency for lowering insurance premiums.

    Or making housing affordable.

    Or strengthening schools.

    Or helping communities recover after storms.

    Or fixing Florida’s crumbling infrastructure.

    Instead, Florida got Alligator Alcatraz—a political stunt with a billion-dollar price tag.

    One more thing.

    According to the Herald, one of the biggest winners wasn’t a construction company.

    It wasn’t an engineering firm.

    It wasn’t a hospital.

    It wasn’t emergency management.

    It was a portable toilet company.

    More than $219 million.

    For porta-potties.

    You really can’t make this stuff up.

    The question isn’t whether Florida had a billion dollars.

    It did.

    The question is what kind of governor looks at families struggling to insure their homes, teachers struggling to educate their students, seniors struggling to stay afloat… and decides the state’s biggest priority is building more places to lock people up.

    That’s not fiscal responsibility.

    That’s not leadership.

    That’s choosing political theater over the people you were elected to serve.

    Scarlett says no.

  • Trump’s Name Is Being Removed From the Kennedy

    Trump’s Name Is Being Removed From the Kennedy

    Turns out you cannot just slap your name on a national cultural institution because your ego needs more square footage.

    Workers are removing Donald Trump’s name from the Kennedy Center after a federal judge ruled that the Trump-controlled board did not have the legal authority to rename the building.

    That’s right….A national memorial honoring President John F. Kennedy was renamed after Donald Trump.

    Not by Congress.

    Not by the American people.

    Not because of some overwhelming public demand.

    Just because people with power decided that apparently every building, airport, golf course, and flat surface in America should eventually have Trump’s name on it.

    And now the letters are coming down.

    This Is About More Than a Sign

    The Kennedy Center does not belong to Donald Trump.

    It does not belong to his board.

    It does not belong to whichever political party happens to be in power.

    It belongs to the American people.

    That is why the court stepped in.

    Because public institutions are not personal trophies.

    Imagine if every president simply renamed national landmarks after themselves.

    The Lincoln Memorial becomes the Obama Memorial.

    The Washington Monument becomes the Bush Monument.

    The Statue of Liberty becomes whatever billionaire happened to be writing checks that week.

    Most Americans would immediately recognize how ridiculous that sounds.

    Yet somehow we are supposed to pretend this situation was perfectly normal.

    The Ego Never Stops

    This is the part that always amazes me.

    There are more than 600 Trump-branded properties around the world.

    Hotels.

    Golf courses.

    Residential towers.

    Resorts.

    Licensing deals.

    Merchandise.

    Books.

    Coins.

    NFTs.

    Shoes.

    Apparently that was still not enough.

    At some point the question stops being “Why are people taking the name down?”

    And becomes:

    “Why was it there in the first place?”

    The Workers Deserve an Award

    Somewhere in Washington, workers showed up with scaffolding, tools, and a court order.

    Honestly, they may be the heroes of the week.

    Because there is something beautifully symbolic about watching actual working people undo something powerful people never should have done.

    One letter at a time.

    One bolt at a time.

    One giant ego adjustment at a time.

    The Lesson

    Rules matter.

    Laws matter.

    Public institutions matter.

    And no matter how powerful someone becomes, they do not get to turn national landmarks into vanity projects.

    The letters are coming down.

    The court has spoken.

    The building survives.

    The republic survives.

    And somewhere, a tarp is doing the Lord’s work.

    What in the flip?

    Scarlett says no.

  • The Apache Crash Was Still Under Investigation.

    The Apache Crash Was Still Under Investigation.

    The Strikes Had Already Begun.

    Two American soldiers survived a terrifying helicopter crash near the Strait of Hormuz. Thank goodness. But Americans deserve to know why the military response moved faster than the public explanation.

    On June 8, a U.S. Army AH-64 Apache helicopter went down near the coast of Oman while patrolling regional waters.

    The two soldiers on board were rescued within approximately two hours. They were reported to be in stable condition.

    That is the good news.

    The deeply troubling part is what happened next.

    U.S. Central Command announced that the cause of the incident was still under investigation.

    Then, on June 9, CENTCOM announced that the United States had completed strikes against Iranian air-defense systems, ground-control stations, and surveillance-radar sites near the Strait of Hormuz. CENTCOM described the strikes as a response to Iran’s downing of the helicopter and to recent attacks on U.S. forces and commercial ships.

    Apparently, the investigation was still open, but the missiles did not need to wait for the paperwork.

    What Do We Actually Know?

    A U.S. official told Reuters that the Apache had been brought down by an Iranian one-way attack drone.

    Iran disputed that account. Iranian state media cited a military source claiming that the country had not conducted offensive air operations in the Strait of Hormuz during the previous 24 hours.

    President Donald Trump then added his own dramatic description, telling reporters that an Iranian “bomb” had lodged inside the helicopter without exploding.

    Perhaps every detail of that account will ultimately be confirmed.

    Perhaps it will not.

    That is precisely why investigations exist.

    The American people should not have to piece together the justification for military escalation from an official press release, an unnamed source, a presidential monologue, and conflicting accounts from a hostile foreign government.

    Questions Are Not Betrayal

    There is a predictable response whenever anyone asks uncomfortable questions about military action.

    Why are you defending Iran?

    Why do you hate the troops?

    Why can’t you just trust the president?

    Please.

    Demanding accurate information before a conflict widens is not defending Iran. It is defending American service members who may be sent into an increasingly dangerous situation. It is defending civilians who do not get to opt out when bombs begin falling. It is defending the public’s right to understand what is being done in our name.

    The two soldiers aboard that Apache deserved a rescue mission. They deserved the full weight of the United States military working to bring them home safely.

    They also deserve leaders who do not treat their terrifying experience as a convenient blank check for escalation.

    Americans Have Seen This Movie Before

    This country has learned, repeatedly and painfully, what happens when certainty is announced before the evidence is fully explained.

    A military response can trigger retaliation.

    Retaliation can trigger another response.

    Oil prices rise. Gas prices rise. Markets react. Families feel the consequences. Service members are placed in greater danger. Civilians thousands of miles away pay with their lives.

    And suddenly the public is being told that asking how we got here is somehow unpatriotic.

    No.

    When a helicopter goes down and American soldiers are endangered, Americans deserve the truth.

    When military strikes follow, Americans deserve even more of it.

    Not eventually.

    Not after the story changes three times.

    Before the next round of escalation begins.

    What in the flip?