There's a Presidential address tonight, which the White House says will be be about "free and fair elections"* and "a couple of other things."
If the sitting President manages to cover only three topics in the course of a speech, it'll be a first.
But the stuff about elections puts news media in a quandary: provide a platform for yet more falsehoods about elections (including, according to credible sources, the 2020 Presidential election), or ignore it, and incur the wrath of an Administration with a history of striking back? Brendan Carr's FCC has been uncommonly pugnacious, so we'll probably see and hear the spectacle all across radio and TV.
Depending on what he says and takes action on, it could be a crossing of Rubicon -- if that means anything at all under an Administration that crosses rivers-not-to-be-crossed as if they were taking commuter bridges in and out of Washington DC. I'll be watching, if only because power-grabbing regimes count on burnout and over-familiarity with awfulness to enable their encroachments.
Pundit after pundit, editorial after editorial has asked, "When will it get to be too much?" I think that's the wrong question, one based an overly-simplified version of history. There is very rarely a moment when everything changes, especially for the people in the moment; Ralph Waldo Emerson may have "heard the shot fired 'round the World" at the Old North Bridge, but he was listening in 1837, when the issues of 1775 were long settled. Conflict had been ongoing; British troops and Colonial militias had been on the move long before. Conversely, a lot of Americans didn't find out they were in the middle of a shooting war until long afterward.
One day, everyone will have been against this. One day, the current mess won't just be something happening on your computer or television screen.
Tonight? Who knows. That's why I'll watch.
__________________
* Which, by the way, they're all been here in the United States, for at least all of your lifetime and probably long before. Claims to the contrary (especially for 2020) have been unequivocally shown to be lies, distortions and/or bullshit-laden hot air, by everyone from investigating Feds to international observers, as well as journalists who stand to get a lot more attention from bombshells about cheating than a dull report that everything went according to routine.
Update
1 year ago

