Julie said to me, “I’ve got something for you to read.” I expected a funny meme. She handed me her phone with this set up for me to read:
This is Not a Drill: Trump’s Day-One Order Sets the Stage for Martial Law
By Tony PentimalliOn January 20, 2025, while the press focused on the optics of Donald Trump’s indoor inauguration, something far more dangerous was set in motion — off-camera, away from the ceremony, and beneath the radar of a public lulled by spectacle.
Trump signed an executive order declaring a national emergency at the southern border. But the most alarming part? It gives the Department of Defense and the Department of Homeland Security just 90 days to deliver a joint report on whether he should invoke the Insurrection Act.
That deadline is April 20.
This isn’t about immigration. It’s about power. The Insurrection Act, passed in 1807, gives the president the authority to deploy the U.S. military on American soil. That means troops in our cities. That means bypassing governors. That means suspending protest rights. That means the death of democratic dissent — under the false pretense of restoring “order.”
And Trump’s not hiding it. He’s preparing it.
We’ve seen this before. In June 2020, after the murder of George Floyd, millions of Americans rose up in protest. Trump didn’t respond with compassion — he called for “domination.” When the military hesitated to invoke the Insurrection Act, Trump sent federal forces to violently clear peaceful protesters from Lafayette Square so he could wave a Bible in front of a church. Not an ounce of remorse followed. He was angry the generals didn’t go far enough.
This time, he’s made sure they won’t hesitate.
Since returning to power, Trump has purged the Pentagon of independent thinkers. In their place? Loyalists. Pete Hegseth is now Secretary of Defense. Tulsi Gabbard runs intelligence. And J.D. Vance — Vice President — is openly on board with using military force against Americans on American soil.
Then, on March 19, those three — Vance, Gabbard, and Hegseth — staged a photo op at the southern border. Not a routine visit. Not a strategy session. A performance. Think about it. Why would the Vice President, the head of military intelligence, and the Defense Secretary all need to go to the border together? Why make a media spectacle of it?
Because it wasn’t about the border. It was about the optics. It was about laying the emotional groundwork for invoking the Insurrection Act. They were building the narrative. “We had to act.” “We had no choice.” “The crisis was too big.”
And what comes next?It’s June 2025. Trump goes on national TV and declares that Democratic cities are under siege by “radicals” and “illegals.” He signs the Insurrection Act order. Troops hit the streets of Atlanta, Chicago, and Philadelphia. Protesters are arrested under “emergency provisions.” Journalists are detained. Social media accounts vanish. Immigrants are swept into detention centers. The press is told to stand down. The public is told to shut up.
And it’s all legal.
Some of you might think, “He’s bluffing. The military won’t go along. The courts will stop him.”
Really? Was he bluffing when federal agents brutalized peaceful protesters in Lafayette Square? Did the military refuse? No. The National Guard was deployed. Many in uniform carried out the order. It was only later that a few expressed regret — after the damage was done.
Did the courts stop January 6? No. They prosecuted rioters after the fact, but the attack happened. Congress fled. Democracy was nearly strangled live on TV.
Did they stop the family separation policy? No. Thousands of children were taken from their parents before courts intervened — long after the trauma was inflicted. Did they stop the Muslim ban? No. The Supreme Court upheld it. Entire families were stranded or banned simply because of where they came from.
Did they stop ICE raids or CBP abuses? Rarely. A handful of rulings. A few headlines. But the system kept grinding, unchecked and cruel.
So if you’re waiting for “the system” to save us, you’re waiting for something that has already failed.
The April 20 report is coming. If it recommends using the Insurrection Act — and let’s be honest, it will — Trump will frame it as a reluctant but necessary move. He’ll say he tried everything else. He’ll claim it’s about protecting America. But what he’s really protecting is his own authority.
This is how authoritarianism arrives: not with tanks, but with legal memos, press events, and a scared public hoping someone else will stop it.
So what do we do?
We speak now. Loudly. Forcefully.
Call your representatives and demand they investigate Trump’s January 20 order. Push the media to report on the Insurrection Act report before it’s too late. Demand public statements from military and intelligence leaders — now, not after.
Organize. Educate. Resist.
If you’ve never joined a protest before, this is the moment.
If you’ve never spoken up politically, this is the time.
If you’ve never thought it could happen here — it already is.The threat isn’t coming. It’s here. And silence is exactly what Trump is counting on.
It’s a sobering thought that’s difficult to digest all at once, but the pieces all fit. It’s a heck of a lot more likely than my thought of his wanting to take Canada, Mexico, and Greenland. At the same time, that could easily come afterward. Regardless, it’s certainly not about the fentanyl!
It’s difficult to believe, but I find it even more difficult to believe that flaccid pushback he’s received from the Democrats and the public. Sure there’s been a court case here and there, but nothing close to the magnitude of Trump’s egregious behaviour.
I choose to hope because the photos I’ve seen of the “Hands off” marches this past Saturday were inspiring. I was expecting something similar a lot earlier but better late than never. Even better, is there’s another similar protest set for April 19, which is perfect timing if Tony is right.
We’ll see. I’m hopeful and terribly worried at the same time.