Monday, February 02, 2026

The Danger of Turning Americans into Enemies

 

Jan 28, 2026 11:35 AM CT

The Danger of Turning Americans into Enemies

by

Andrew Weinstein

 

Donald Trump American Flag

President Donald Trump delivers remarks in Clive, Iowa, on January 27, 2026. Brendan Smialowski—AFP/Getty Images

The drift toward authoritarianism rarely announces itself with a bang; it begins long before the public recognizes the danger. It begins with language: the slow, deliberate reclassification of fellow citizens as lesser, suspect, or dangerous. Once a government convinces people that some among them are unworthy of rights or empathy, the rest becomes frighteningly easy.

We are watching that process unfold in the United States.

Earlier this month, after federal agents shot and killed Renee Good, senior Trump Administration officials responded not with the sobriety such a tragedy demands but with the most incendiary labels they could summon. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem called Good a “domestic terrorist.” Vice President J.D. Vance doubled down on Noem’s falsehoods, insisting that Good had been “brainwashed” and was part of a “broader left‑wing network,” allegations offered without evidence. He described her death as “a tragedy of her own making,” as though the state bore no responsibility for the bullets its agents fired.

Meanwhile, President Trump’s warnings about the "enemy within” have become the organizing frame for his broader political rhetoric. This year, he has vilified peaceful demonstrators as “thugs” and “paid agitators and insurrectionists.” In doing so, Trump has redefined dissent not as a civic act, but as an enemy force.

These comments are not isolated outbursts. They reflect a pattern history warns us to take seriously.

A few weeks later, the pattern became unmistakable. On Jan. 24, federal agents in Minneapolis shot and killed Alex Pretti, a 37‑year‑old ICU nurse, during an immigration enforcement operation. Video from multiple angles shows Pretti filming officers and helping a woman who had been pushed to the ground. He was pepper‑sprayed, tackled by several agents, and then shot while on the pavement. Independent review of the footage indicates that in the moments before he was taken down, he was holding a phone—not a weapon.

Yet before the facts were known, the administration’s response followed the same script. Noem again labeled the victim a domestic terrorist. Greg Bovino, a senior Border Patrol official, claimed—without evidence—that Pretti had arrived to inflict “maximum damage on individuals” and framed the shooting as a necessary act of self‑defense. White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller escalated the rhetoric further, calling Pretti “an assassin” and insisting that the protests were part of a coordinated effort to undermine federal authority. And Vance, abandoning any pretense of restraint, described the scene as the work of “far-left agitators,” collapsing the distinction between peaceful witnesses and violent extremists.

In each case, the message was the same: these were not citizens with rights; they were enemies.

I have spent decades working at the intersection of law and human rights, serving as a U.S. Public Delegate to the United Nations and an appointee to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council. In diplomatic chambers and historical archives, I have seen how regimes telegraph their intentions. Authoritarian systems rarely begin with mass repression. They begin by redefining who counts as a threat.

And that is precisely what we are witnessing now. Over the past year, the administration has repeatedly used the language of extremism to describe ordinary Americans. During a Chicago immigration raid in October, the Department of Homeland Security labeled Marimar Martinez, another U.S. citizen shot by a federal agent, a “domestic terrorist” in an official press release. In both her case and the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, officials used terminology once reserved for mass‑casualty attacks to describe unarmed civilians attempting to drive away, film an encounter, or help a stranger to her feet.

This is not the language of a confident democracy. It is the language of a government seeking permission: permission to escalate force, evade accountability, and silence dissent.

A recent academic analysis found that Donald Trump has increasingly used the word “evil” not to describe foreign adversaries but to condemn domestic political opponents, journalists, and critics. No modern president has used the term this way. This is not mere name‑calling; it is moral delegitimization. It suggests that disagreement with those in power is not just wrong but wicked.

When leaders describe their critics as “evil,” “radicalized,” or “terrorists,” they are not trying to win an argument. They are trying to end one.

The Trump Administration’s language around immigration enforcement reinforces this point. Officials have warned of “violent efforts to shut down immigration enforcement” and claimed that “domestic terrorists” are using “extreme views” to obstruct federal operations. These sweeping assertions, often contradicted by video evidence and eyewitness accounts, serve a clear purpose: to cast any challenge to federal authority as inherently illegitimate.

Once dissent becomes synonymous with extremism, the state no longer needs to justify its actions. It only needs to point.

The rhetorical pattern after the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti makes this plain.

When officials insist that Good was a terrorist, they are not describing what happened. They are justifying it.

When they claim that Pretti arrived to inflict maximum damage, they are not offering facts. They are manufacturing a threat.

When they declare that questioning the President’s narrative is “propaganda” or “anti‑American,” they are not defending the truth. They are attacking the very idea of accountability.

And when the administration labels its critics and its victims “evil,” “radicalized,” or part of a “terrorist network,” it is not engaging in politics. It is engaging in dehumanization.

History shows that once a government normalizes this language, the slide accelerates. The state becomes both narrator and arbiter of reality. Citizens become suspects. Violence becomes self‑defense. Democracy becomes optional.

Democratic norms can be fragile. They quickly erode when leaders decide that some people are no longer entitled to the protections the rest of us take for granted.

The danger we face is not only the violence we see in our communities or on video. It is the narrative that follows: the official insistence that the victim was not a victim at all, but an enemy of the state.

That is the moment when democracies falter. It is the moment when the government stops speaking about its citizens as citizens.

We can allow a government to describe ordinary citizens as terrorists, to treat dissent as extremism, and to use language as a shield for its own abuses. We can pretend this is normal, or temporary, or harmless.

Or we can recognize what history makes plain: once a government convinces the public that some people are enemies, it rarely stops there. After all, why would your enemies' votes matter? Why would their lives matter?

The health of our republic depends on refusing that premise now, before the vocabulary of authoritarianism becomes the common tongue of American politics, and before more names are added to the list.

 

CBS Boss Bari Weiss has a Jeffrey Epstein Problem

 

CBS Boss Bari Weiss has a Jeffrey Epstein Problem

Turns out one of Weiss' new hires was one of Epstein's biggest pen pals, sending him cringey and disturbing emails.

Three days. That’s how long it took for the Bari Weiss era at CBS News to go from dumpster fire to raging inferno.

First there was the 60 Minutes fiasco. Then the promotion of herself to on air talent for an Erika Kirk town hall ratings disaster. Then there was the shameless promotion of ‘The Free Press’ inferior opinion drek on the CBS website and of course, the Trump-friendly content permeating the once objective, non-partisan news network. Then last week, Weiss’ plan to replace fact-based reporters and high quality journalism with MAGA-coded podcasters and quack influencers met immediate and searing criticism both within and outside of the legendary news network.

Media coverage quickly spotlighted the shaky credentials and conspiracy theory-driven views held by many of Weiss’ new team of nineteen contributors meant to help her turn the legacy news organization into a glorified podcast. But that was just the beginning.

Now, Bari Weiss has an Epstein problem.

Last Friday’s long delayed release of a second tranche of Epstein files revealed uncomfortable ties both close to home and in the workplace for Weiss. Her wife and business partner, Nellie Bowles, shows up in the Epstein Files setting up a meeting with the registered sex offender and engaging in witty banter including about introducing her parents to her new girlfriend, presumably Weiss. Also in the newly released files is Weiss’ just hired CBS News wellness contributor, Peter Attia.

Attia doesn’t just show up in the files. He ranks as one of the top communicators with Epstein. In fact, the DOJ’s “Epstein Library” contains nearly 2000 communications with notorious pedophile Jeffrey Epstein and Epstein’s staff between 2015 and 2019.

The emails include some medical topics and scheduling of appointments but the rest are (at a minimum) cringey and disturbing and some are sexually suggestive as Doctor Jen Gunter found when she read through them. (Read her analysis here.) Some of the low-lights include when Attia emails Epstein (or his staff) about:

The timing of these exchanges is important. Attia had to know something about Epstein’s vile history when they struck up this relationship. Their first contact (at least in these documents) comes about four years after Epstein was incarcerated for sex trafficking crimes. And their emails (& presumably appointments and meetings as well) continue even after Julie Brown’s revealing “Perversion of Justice” investigation in the Miami Herald in 2018 that detailed at least 80 victims of Epstein’s sexual abuse. That story put Epstein back in the headlines and in the sights of federal investigators. In fact, in one of the newly released emails, Attia asks Epstein about the fallout from Brown’s stellar reporting.

The sheer number of Attia mentions in the Epstein files is also notable. There are over 1,700 email exchanges and a total of 1,892 results including calendar entries when you search the full Epstein library for “Attia.” That makes Peter Attia one of Jeffrey Epstein’s biggest pen pals.

Weiss cannot pretend to be surprised. Even before this recent email expose, there was evidence of Attia’s attachment to Epstein. In his 2022 book “Outlive,” Attia recounts how he went to an appointment with Epstein in New York rather than return home to California when his infant son was facing a near death medical emergency. By the time Attia shared this story, Epstein was dead by suicide and details of his disgusting sex trafficking, rape and abuse were becoming quite well known. But none of that was mentioned when Weiss interviewed Attia about his book on her ironically named “Honestly” podcast in 2023.

Flash forward to 2025 when Weiss took over the news operation at CBS News. Soon after, 60 Minutes devoted a segment to Attia’s wellness and longevity theories. It was a fluffy piece with limited questions about Attia’s theories that journalist Bill Grueskin called “more Home Shopping Network than Mike Wallace.” Then just a few days later, Attia’s name showed up on CBS again. This time it was in a CBS News story about how an some 8-thousand documents released by

Congressional Democrats revealed more information about Epstein’s “habits and relationships.” One of those relationships was with, you guessed it: Peter Attia. The CBS story that day said:

“Epstein also repeatedly met Peter Attia, a doctor specializing in longevity whose books have sold millions of copies. Attia’s later appointments suggest Epstein was a patient. The schedule includes notations for blood draws and follow-ups over several years.”

We now know that Attia’s relationship with the notorious sexual predator went beyond blood draws.

Weiss, CBS and Attia have yet to comment on the latest developments about the extensive Attia and Epstein relationship that is even getting big play in the Murdoch-owned, Trump friendly New York Post. The Wrap is reporting with that CBS is expected to cut ties with Attia but there’s no confirmation of that yet.

Meanwhile, CBS News has downplaying the latest document release story and completely ignoring the part about the enormous number of Attia and Epstein emails altogether. CBS’s omissions were especially notable on Saturday, January 31st, the day the news broke about Weiss’ wife and Attia both being in the Epstein files. As New York Magazine’s Vulture media critic Joe Adalian posted on social media:

“Amount of time devoted to the Epstein Files tonight on the Big 3 network newscasts: ABC: 4 minutes NBC: 2 minutes CBS: 30 seconds CBS was the only network that didn’t have a full report on Epstein tonight; instead, its DC reporter mentioned it at the end of her gov’t shutdown story.”

Weiss now has to decide whether to keep Attia and defend him, or whether to acknowledge her error and drop him. Even if she cuts ties with Attia, it’s clear she made an error hiring him in the first place. Frankly, it’s hard to think of one smart, effective thing Weiss has done she was put in charge of CBS News and we should expect even more chaos ahead.

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