Trump Admin’s Troubling Art Of The Label

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An illuminating segment on MSNOW’s Weekend Primetime examined how the Trump administration has refined what can only be described as the art of the label—an exercise in branding human beings as threats and then using that label alone to justify the application of overwhelming military force. Host James Sample walked viewers through how this practice operates in real time: individuals or groups are branded with ominous-sounding designations, and those designations, largely untested and unchallenged, become sufficient grounds for detention, deportation, or death. The alarming part is not merely the labeling itself, but how seamlessly these hollow classifications are converted into acts of state violence, often without any discernible legal foundation or meaningful oversight.

For a country that endlessly invokes the rule of law and treats “due process” as a sacred principle, it is chilling to watch how easily government officials can, on little more than assertion, affix a label to a person and render that individual a legitimate military target. Once the label is applied, the usual safeguards—evidence, hearings, accountability—simply vanish. Even more disturbing is the near-total absence of resistance from Congress or sustained scrutiny from the media, allowing the executive branch to operate as judge, jury, and executioner based on nothing more than its own say-so.

Sample illustrated how this tactic has evolved and expanded. It began, he explained, with migrants being labeled as members of the dangerous gang Tren de Aragua, a claim often unsupported by evidence, and then using that unvetted designation to justify sending them to CECOT, where they were subjected to brutal conditions and torture. The label alone did the work; no adjudication was required, no proof demanded. From there, the administration escalated, branding people aboard boats in the Caribbean as “narcoterrorists” and then using that designation to justify blowing the vessels out of the water, killing those on board. Beyond the invocation of the narcoterrorism label itself, the administration offered little to persuade the public that the people killed actually met that definition.

According to Sample, the most recent and perhaps most dangerous iteration of this practice has emerged in Africa, where the administration has labeled certain regions in Nigeria and Somalia as ISIS-controlled areas and then relied solely on that characterization to carry out military strikes. In Nigeria, one such attack reportedly occurred on Christmas Day, underscoring the moral numbness that accompanies this kind of empty labeling. When entire regions can be reduced to a single word—“ISIS”—and that word becomes a license to kill, the line between lawful military action and lawless violence all but disappears.

At some point, Congress must intervene and reclaim its constitutionally mandated role. That intervention should begin with demanding answers about these labels: how they are defined, what evidence supports them, and what legal reasoning is used to transform them into justifications for lethal force. The military lawyers who sign off on these actions should be required to testify publicly and explain their rationale to the American people. Only sustained oversight and transparency can halt the dangerous slide toward governance by label, where words replace law and accountability is an afterthought. One can only hope Congress acts before more lives are lost to this reckless and hollow exercise of power.

Grifting Nepo-Babies In Trump Admin 2.0?


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An interesting segment on MSNOW’s Weekend Primetime show delved into the staggering corruption emerging in Trump administration 2.0 — even coining the phrase “Grifting Nepo-Babies” to capture the growing concern about the financial windfalls reportedly enjoyed by the children of several senior Trump–era officials. Co-host Catherine Rampell laid out what she called a pattern of politically connected offspring cashing in during the second Trump presidency. According to the segment, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick’s sons were among those observers have flagged as benefiting enormously from their father’s presence in government — and in their case, the benefits come via the Wall Street powerhouse their father built, Cantor Fitzgerald.

Specifically: when Lutnick stepped into the Cabinet, ownership and control of Cantor Fitzgerald were formally transferred to his two oldest sons, Brandon Lutnick (now Chairman & CEO) and Kyle Lutnick (Executive Vice-Chairman). Under their leadership, the firm is on track for a 2025 revenue haul that reportedly represents its most profitable year ever — a jump of more than a quarter over last year. Much of that windfall stems from Cantor’s aggressive crypto-investment banking, SPAC dealmaking, stablecoin custody and other high-risk, high-reward operations that the firm has doubled down on since the crypto boom took off. Critics argue that this close alignment between a senior Cabinet official and a high-performing Wall Street firm controlled by his children constitutes a textbook example of revolving-door conflicts of interest — especially given the firm’s deep involvement in sectors (like crypto) where regulatory and trade policy decisions may directly affect their bottom line. The optics are stark: a firm once headed by the Commerce Secretary is now raking in record profits under the leadership of his sons, just as policies that shape global trade and regulation are being decided by that same Secretary.

The segment also highlighted another striking example beyond the Lutnicks: Alex Witkoff, the son of Steve Witkoff — himself appointed by Trump as a Middle East envoy. According to multiple recent reports, Alex has aggressively pursued large-scale investments from sovereign‐wealth funds and Gulf-state investors. In 2024 he pitched a $4 billion U.S. real-estate credit fund to the Qatar Investment Authority, promising returns and sizeable management fees; while Qatar reportedly declined, sources say Alex continued courting investors from Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait through at least August 2025. As his father negotiated cease-fire and hostage-release deals across the Middle East under the auspices of the Trump administration, Alex was quietly soliciting money — a convergence of diplomacy and real-estate finance that ethics experts argue raises serious conflict-of-interest concerns. Indeed, GULF-state investment vehicles have already backed several properties owned or developed by the family firm (known as the Witkoff Group), including major assets in New York and Florida. While a spokesperson for the firm has since claimed the specific real-estate fund proposal was “preliminary” and will not move forward, critics maintain that even the attempt — coming alongside high-stakes diplomatic negotiations — exemplifies the growing problem of political power being leveraged for private enrichment.

Rampell then pivoted to Trump’s own children, where the accusations grow louder and the optics far more politically potent. She cited a Forbes report claiming Eric Trump’s wealth has increased dramatically since his father returned to office — with critics arguing that this level of enrichment while a parent is in the White House reflects the same ethical vulnerabilities that plagued Trump’s first term. She also referenced reporting about a startup associated with Donald Trump Jr. that has reportedly secured a major Pentagon-related deal — figures like the oft-circulated “$600 million” have fueled alarm among ethics experts and bipartisan government watchdogs who argue that such arrangements warrant far more transparency. And even Trump’s youngest son, Barron Trump — normally kept out of the political spotlight — was mentioned in the segment due to media chatter about alleged lucrative cryptocurrency-related ventures linked indirectly to his name, though these claims remain murky and largely unverified, further contributing to the perception of a sprawling and loosely monitored financial ecosystem orbiting around the Trump family.

Rampell also revisited the long-running controversies around Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, whose massive financial gains following Trump’s first term — including high-profile investments from foreign sovereign funds — continue to be held up by critics as one of the most glaring examples of blurred ethical boundaries. His ongoing business expansions during Trump’s second presidency only reinforce concerns among ethics observers who argue that the revolving door between political power and personal enrichment is now swinging more freely than ever.

The larger point the MSNOW hosts made was that corruption — whether alleged, implied or documented — has quickly become a defining theme of Trump 2.0. Democrats are already gearing up to make it a core message for the 2026 midterms, framing the administration as a government increasingly captured by the financial ambitions of the president’s inner circle and their families. But what may pose a more immediate threat to Trump is that even portions of his MAGA base are beginning to grumble. Online circles that once defended every decision of the Trump family have begun to express frustration at what they see as blatant self-dealing — especially as the administration continues to sideline issues that energized Trump’s grassroots supporters in the first place: lower prices, avoiding new foreign conflicts, demands for release of the Epstein files, and promises of “draining the swamp.” For some longtime loyalists, the contrast between those unmet commitments and the constant headlines about politically connected children becoming wealthier has begun to feel impossible to ignore.

How this discontent evolves could have real consequences in the 2026 midterms. If the corruption narrative continues to grow, and if MAGA voters feel increasingly alienated or taken for granted, Republicans could find themselves facing a demoralized base at the very moment Democrats are preparing to campaign on a simple, sharp message: that Trump 2.0 has become a family business masquerading as a government. The question heading into 2026 is not just whether Democrats can capitalize on this narrative, but whether the erosion of enthusiasm among core Trump supporters will quietly do the job for them.