Thursday Cartoons: A Trump Dictatorship

The last few days have been very difficult.

This video below is enough to make me vomit:

Here is another one:

I will put up a few things and then add some cartoons. I’m not handling all this “stuff” right now…

…this will help.

Just days after Trump returned to the White House, Instagram is censoring abortion content. This is what Aid Access' account looks like right now – posts about how to get abortion medication has been blurred out.

Jessica Valenti (@jessicavalenti.bsky.social) 2025-01-22T21:41:44.160Z

Instagram is also making it impossible to find the account. This is what happened when I tried to search for the group – even in my own following list

Jessica Valenti (@jessicavalenti.bsky.social) 2025-01-22T21:41:44.161Z

Josh Marshall from TPM thinks this abortion blackout is another offering by Zuckerberg to Trump.

A Milwaukee TV weather forecaster was dropped by her station a day after she criticized Elon Musk for his Nazi salute

Phil Lewis (@phillewis.bsky.social) 2025-01-22T22:58:21.041Z

And here it comes, folks. The real deepstate. A completely incompetent one to replace the fantasy one they made up. We are so fucked.mastodon.social

Shoq (@shoq.bsky.social) 2025-01-23T00:55:51Z

Stay safe.


5 Comments on “Thursday Cartoons: A Trump Dictatorship”

  1. Three days in, and I am speechless.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      Hitler Pardoned His Goons Too Trump’s Actions’ Parallels with Germany 1935

      https://harrylitman.substack.com/p/hitler-pardoned-his-goons-too

      But it took Hitler some time to completely displace the political system in Germany. Early in the Nazi regime, existing members of the judiciary and legal professionals still tried to uphold and enforce the law. Many turned a blind eye to the SA’s crimes, including a series of gruesome murders of Nazi opponents, even as they attempted to assert some of their traditional prosecutorial powers.

      It was the abuses at Hohnstein Concentration Camp—an early detention center for communists and other political prisoners—that were too savage and notorious to ignore. In 1935, local prosecutors brought 23 SA guards at the camp to trial on charges of torture and brutal mistreatment, including widespread “suiciding” of prisoners. The SA defendants were all convicted and sentenced to prison.

      Within a year, they were all out, released on Hitler’s orders. After the trial, senior Nazi officials demanded their release and acquittal. Then, in November 1935, Hitler pardoned every last one of the convicted men. It was a brutal demonstration of his domination of the judiciary and a key benchmark in his complete conquest of the rule of law in Germany—one that paved the way for his unchecked rule and thirst for world domination.