Monday, March 23, 2026

News and Ideas Worth Sharing

Is it time for our commander in chief to be dishonorably discharged—before he invokes the Insurrection Act?

Democratic societies do not accept secret police behavior simply because it is directed at unpopular or politically vulnerable groups. History shows that once such practices are normalized, they rarely remain confined.

To the editor:

Across history, authoritarian regimes have relied on internal enforcement arms that operate with secrecy, intimidation, and broad discretionary power. The Gestapo in Nazi Germany, the Stasi in East Germany, and similar secret police systems elsewhere were not defined only by brutality but by normalization: masked agents, opaque procedures, fear-based compliance, and the erosion of civilian oversight.

When immigration enforcement adopts tactics that resemble these patterns—unmarked vehicles, masked agents, minimal identification, aggressive raids, and resistance to public accountability—alarm bells should ring. Democratic societies do not accept secret police behavior simply because it is directed at unpopular or politically vulnerable groups. History shows that once such practices are normalized, they rarely remain confined.

The greatest danger comes when a head of state frames dissent, protest, or political opposition as a threat requiring “order” rather than constitutional restraint—and then signals readiness to deploy extraordinary force. At that point, the question is no longer about immigration enforcement—it is about whether the rule of law still governs those who wield power.

Before invoking the Insurrection Act—a tool intended for the gravest national emergencies—Americans must ask whether the real threat is disorder or the steady hollowing-out of democratic norms by an executive who treats accountability as optional.

History teaches us that democracies do not collapse all at once. They erode—quietly—when fear replaces law, secrecy replaces transparency, and force replaces consent.

Daniel Hopkins
Williamstown

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For there to finally be peace in the Middle East and Ukraine, countries will have to recognize the need to compromise

Trump often boasts about his relationships with Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin. If true, now is the time to put that to good use.

The call for Bard College President Leon Botstein’s resignation is premature and irresponsible

Not only is the open letter divisive and destructive to basic principles of fairness, but so is the headlining and broadcasting of the letter by local publications.

Shining our way to national security

The good news is that thanks to rapid technological advances, solar power generation and storage are now cost competitive with petroleum-based sources, while being relatively free of their “externalities” of pollution, global warming, and, yes, wars.

The Edge Is Free To Read.

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