Etiquette



DP Etiquette

First rule: Don't be a jackass. Most people are good.

Other rules: Do not attack or insult people you disagree with. Engage with facts, logic and beliefs. Out of respect for others, please provide some sources for the facts and truths you rely on if you are asked for that. If emotion is getting out of hand, get it back in hand. To limit dehumanizing people, don't call people or whole groups of people disrespectful names, e.g., stupid, dumb or liar. Insulting people is counterproductive to rational discussion. Insult makes people angry and defensive. All points of view are welcome, right, center, left and elsewhere. Just disagree, but don't be belligerent or reject inconvenient facts, truths or defensible reasoning.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

When Democracy Damages Itself (And what honest recovery requires)

 

When Democracy Damages Itself: A Theory of Political Craters

Why the next election won't fix what has been broken—and what honest recovery actually requires


The Senate's War Powers vote this week tells you everything you need to know about the political system we now inhabit. On Tuesday, June 23, four Republican senators crossed party lines to join Democrats in passing a bipartisan resolution directing President Trump to end unauthorized military operations in Iran—the first time both chambers of Congress had passed such a resolution since 1973. A genuine constitutional moment. By Wednesday night, after Trump traveled to the Capitol, screamed at the offending senators, called Bill Cassidy a "lunatic," and threatened political annihilation, the same chamber reversed itself. The resolution died 47–50.

Senator Cassidy, who had already lost his Louisiana primary—a man with nothing left to lose electorally—still flipped. That detail deserves to sit with you for a moment.

What we witnessed was not political chaos or inconsistency. It was the system working exactly as a personalist regime is designed to work. The first vote was a brief spasm of institutional memory. The second vote was the regime reasserting dominance. Understanding why this is the new normal—and what it means for American democracy going forward—requires a different set of concepts than most political commentary has been willing to supply.



The Wrong Question

The dominant frame in mainstream political commentary treats Trumpism as an aberration—a fever that will break, a norm violation that will eventually self-correct, a crisis that the institutional "guardrails" of American democracy will ultimately contain. The question asked is always some version of: when will things go back to normal?

This is the wrong question. Not because democratic recovery is impossible, but because it mistakes the nature of the damage. Democracy in America has not caught a cold. It has sustained a series of structural injuries—legal, institutional, bureaucratic, historical—that no single election, and no automatic process of institutional self-correction, can simply undo. Before we can think seriously about recovery, we need to be honest about what has actually been broken, and what "broken" means in each case.

Not all damage is the same. Some things are gone forever. Some things would take a generation to rebuild. Some things are theoretically reversible but practically consolidated for decades. Treating all of them as equivalent—or worse, assuming they will all snap back on their own—is not optimism. It is a failure of political analysis that leaves us strategically blind.


A Taxonomy of Democratic Damage

Historical Facts: Gone

The strictest category of irreversibility is the one that gets least attention in political commentary, perhaps because it is the most uncomfortable: historical facts cannot be undone. They are not policy. They belong to a different ontological register entirely.

The senior Iranian leadership echelon killed in the course of the current conflict is dead. No future administration, no diplomatic initiative, no UN resolution changes that fact or the political configurations those deaths have permanently altered. The head of state removed in Venezuela is gone; the attack occurred; the people killed are dead. Whatever follows in that region will be built on those facts, not around them.

Gaza: if genocide occurred—and the legal case before international tribunals is substantial—no future aid policy, no change in American diplomatic posture, undoes it. The obligation that follows is prospective accountability, not retroactive reversal.

The people who died when USAID's medical supply chains collapsed after the agency's dismantlement: gone. The communities in fragile states that lost food assistance, vaccination programs, and public health infrastructure: permanently altered.

Historical facts set the permanent floor of any future reconstruction. Acknowledging this is not despair. It is the minimum required honesty about what any future political movement will actually be working with.

Institutional Craters: Practically Gone

USAID is the paradigm case of a different category: institutional damage so severe that formal legal restoration would be hollow.

What made USAID function was not its budget line or its legal authority. It was decades of accumulated human social capital: institutional memory, field relationships, NGO partnerships, country-specific expertise, logistics networks built through years of operational experience. A future Congress could pass a "USAID Restoration Act" tomorrow. What it would be funding is essentially a startup—beginning from near-zero, in a hostile political environment, without the professionals (who have retired, dispersed, or moved to private sector roles), without the partner networks (which have atrophied, pivoted, or been replaced by other actors), and against a rhetorical landscape in which "globalist foreign aid waste" has been successfully baked into the expectations of a significant portion of the electorate.

You can build something like USAID eventually. You cannot restore USAID. The distinction matters enormously for anyone serious about what reconstruction actually entails.

The same logic applies, with variations in degree, to the State Department's career diplomatic corps, the EPA's scientific staff, the NIH and NSF grant networks, the university research infrastructure currently being defunded, and the public health logistics weakened by a decade of political assault.

 

The Bipartisan Construction: How a Foreign Policy Commitment Built a Domestic Apparatus


The most instructive illustration of how craters get built across party lines has a specific and documented origin point—and it was not Trump.

The infrastructure came first. In May 2023, the Biden administration released the U.S. National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism. On September 27, 2023—ten days before October 7—eight federal agencies issued coordinated written guidance clarifying, for the first time in writing, that Title VI of the Civil Rights Act covers antisemitism on campus. The enforcement machinery was assembled and ready before the conflict that would activate it.

After October 7, unconditional weapons transfers to Israel continued while a series of related policy decisions—the rapid defunding of UNRWA on unverified allegations subsequently debunked by independent review, the flouting of ICJ provisional measures ordering humanitarian access, the continuation of arms transfers through the deaths of aid workers in pre-coordinated convoys—drove a protest movement that by spring 2024 was spreading faster than any antiwar movement since Vietnam, with global reach that threatened to make the policy politically untenable at the worst possible moment: primary season, Arab-American voters organizing in Michigan, "Genocide Joe" banners at every major university in the country.

The institutional response was the pre-built apparatus deployed at scale. The Office for Civil Rights opened dozens of Title VI investigations. The IHRA definition was operationalized in enforcement. Congressional hearings with bipartisan participation—Democratic members as active participants—demanded university presidents declare specific pro-Palestinian slogans to be genocidal antisemitism under implicit funding threat. Harvard's Claudine Gay and Penn's Liz Magill resigned. Democratic mayors authorized police action against encampments. Career State Department and USAID officials resigned after being told to stop documenting the policy's costs. By April 2024 the crackdown was nationwide, tactically effective at breaking protest momentum, and politically ineffective: public opinion kept moving regardless.

We did not know in April 2024 what Biden had told Netanyahu in October 2023. We know it now. In a January 2025 MSNBC interview with Lawrence O'Donnell—material now submitted as evidence in ICJ proceedings—Biden recounted telling Netanyahu days after October 7: "BB, you can't be carpet bombing these communities... You can't indiscriminately bomb civilian areas, even if the bad guys are there... That's why we came up with the UN—new deals by which what we do relative to civilians and military." He continued substantial military assistance anyway. International law scholar William Schabas—the leading authority on the Genocide Convention—has stated that a complicity finding is "certainly possible" given this record. Read retrospectively, the domestic strategy becomes legible: an administration that privately knew its policy crossed the legal lines it had itself named had powerful structural incentives to prevent that criticism from becoming a mainstream crisis.

No conspiracy was required. Convergent elite incentives—shared donor networks, shared foreign policy commitments, shared institutional interest in controlling the political cost of an internationally documented commitment—were sufficient. The result was a collaboratively constructed crater: normalized federal leverage over universities, broadened harassment standards that operationalized subjective "feeling unsafe" criteria as enforceable complaints, and a flexible speech-regulation tool now available for redirection by any future administration facing its own inconvenient dissent. Trump inherited every instrument. He sent letters to sixty universities, layered Title IX and DEI enforcement on top of the existing Title VI machinery, made UNRWA's defunding permanent, and through Project Esther converted the "Hamas adjacency" framing—pioneered in Democratic congressional hearings—into grounds for deporting green card holders who had engaged in protected political speech. The crater was bipartisanly dug. Trump deepened it.

 

The ICE/DHS Machinery: Bureaucratic Inertia at Scale

This is where the abstract theory meets concrete arithmetic—and the numbers are staggering.

Through two pieces of legislation—the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 and the Secure America Act of June 2026—Congress has injected more than $140 billion into ICE and CBP, with all funds legally obligated through September 30, 2029. The breakdown includes $38 billion directly to ICE for expanded personnel, technology, and state and local partnerships; $22 billion to Border Patrol; $5 billion for border security technology; and $350 million specifically for local law enforcement agencies that coordinate with ICE. The result: eight mega-detention centers capable of holding 7,000–10,000 people each; sixteen regional processing facilities; 12,000 newly hired enforcement officers; and a national network of local law enforcement agencies financially integrated with federal immigration enforcement.

This is not a policy preference. By 2030, this is physical reality: concrete, steel, signed contracts, hired personnel on federal career tracks with pensions and union protections, private contractor profit streams with political lobbying power, and hundreds of local jurisdictions that have oriented their own budgets and staffing around federal coordination money.

The progressives who won New York primaries this week on "Abolish ICE" platforms are making a sincere moral claim about genuine cruelty. But as a programmatic promise, they will encounter not a policy preference but a civilizational-scale bureaucratic and financial commitment. A future administration cannot simply "not spend" money already legally obligated in contracts. It cannot fire 12,000 federal law enforcement officers by executive order. It cannot break multi-year private contracts without paying termination penalties. It cannot withdraw from local partnership agreements without generating opposition from hundreds of sheriffs and police chiefs across the country who have built their own budgets around federal coordination funds.

The honest question is not "How do we abolish ICE?" It is: How do we begin to reduce the scale and cruelty of this, incrementally, over many years, against organized resistance from every direction? That is a harder question. It is also the real one.

Some of the most consequential damage has been done through the courts, and this category requires careful handling because it is genuinely distinct from the others. Legal decisions can be reversed—Roe v. Wade's overturning in 2022 proves that even 49-year-old precedents are not permanent. So the damage here is not ontologically irreversible.

But "theoretically reversible" is doing enormous work in that sentence. Consider what reversal actually requires. The Supreme Court's 2025 Trump v. CASA decision—ruling 6–3 that federal district courts cannot issue nationwide injunctions against executive orders—transformed presidential EOs into effective diktats. Before CASA, a single federal judge anywhere in the country could halt an unconstitutional order nationwide while litigation proceeded. After CASA, an injunction applies only to named plaintiffs (or in some cases a named class in class actions, few of which have blocked enforcement of EOs) ; the policy remains active and enforceable everywhere else while years of appeals grind forward. By the time a case reaches the Supreme Court for final resolution, the policy has been on the ground, restructuring reality, for years.

Reversing CASA requires a future Supreme Court majority with both the composition and the will to do so. The current majority was shaped by appointments that run through the 2030s and 2040s. It will not be this court. It will not be 2028 or 2032. It is, at minimum, a generational project—and that assumes the political infrastructure to pursue it even exists, which is not guaranteed.

The same analysis applies to the 2024 presidential immunity ruling (Trump v. United States), which granted absolute immunity for "core official acts" (including all DOJ directives) and effectively insulated the weaponization of federal law enforcement from legal challenge. And to Schedule F, which reclassified tens of thousands of career civil servants as at-will political appointees. And to the maximalist Unitary Executive doctrine, under which the president claims total, unreviewable control over the entire executive branch.

Roe took 49 years and a systematic, multi-decade legal and political project to overturn. The timeline for reversing this cluster of decisions is not shorter.


The Personalist Regime: How It Works

Underlying all of this structural change is a transformation in the style of political power that deserves to be named clearly: Trump 2.0 is a personalist regime, not merely an aggressive presidency.

The distinction matters. Richard Nixon was paranoid and retaliatory, but he operated within a party that could ultimately override him. When Nixon's conduct threatened the Republican Party as an institution, senior senators marched into the Oval Office and told him he had to go. The party protected itself from the leader. Under Trump 2.0, the party and the leader have completely merged. The RNC functions as an enforcement arm for personal mandates. Defying Trump is not a policy disagreement—it is treated as betrayal of the party itself.

Nixon's aggression was also largely covert: enemies lists in desk drawers, wiretaps hidden behind executive deniability. Trump's discipline is intentionally public. Screaming at senators in a closed-door luncheon, calling them "lunatics" to their faces, blasting them on social media within the hour—this is not loss of control. It is a calculated deterrent. Every Republican watching knows exactly what happens to the next person who steps out of line.

And crucially: under Nixon, policy disagreement was tolerated. Nixon signed the EPA into existence. His senators could oppose him on civil rights legislation without fearing annihilation. Under Trump 2.0, ideological consistency is irrelevant. Thomas Massie was one of the most conservative members of Congress by any voting record. Bill Cassidy had been a reliable Republican for decades. Neither mattered. What matters in a personalist regime is daily, transactional personal fealty—and the moment it lapses, the entire history of loyalty is erased.

The legal architecture has been constructed to make this style of rule effectively unchallengeable. Presidential immunity shields the leader personally from criminal and civil accountability. CASA shields his executive orders from lower-court injunction. A compliant Congress provides political cover. And the DOJ, under absolute presidential immunity for all directives to it, functions as a sword against opponents while the leader himself is insulated from any return fire.


The Ratchet That Only Turns One Way

There is one further dimension that receives insufficient attention: this apparatus does not disappear when Trump leaves office.

When one faction expands presidential power to achieve its political goals, the opposing faction does not voluntarily surrender those powers upon winning the White House. It inherits them. It uses them. This is not a partisan accusation—it is how institutional power works. Biden retained Trump's Golan Heights declaration. He used Title VI enforcement in ways his Republican predecessor pioneered. He ignored career diplomats' International Humanitarian Law warnings on Israel and continued military aid.

A future Democratic president will inherit: absolute immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts; a DOJ that can be directed against political opponents without legal challenge; an executive branch purged of Schedule F employees and restaffed with loyalists; CASA as settled law eliminating the most effective tool for challenging unconstitutional orders; and an immigration enforcement apparatus funded through 2029 with $140 billion in obligated spending. The president who inherits these tools and faces a genuine crisis—a major immigration emergency, a foreign policy confrontation, a domestic political threat—will face enormous pressure to use them. The tools are there. The legal architecture supports their use. The institutional constraints against using them have been systematically dismantled.

This is how structural authoritarianism becomes durable: not necessarily through a single autocrat who holds power indefinitely, but through a ratchet effect in which each administration adds to the arsenal and none voluntarily subtracts from it.


What "Recovery" Actually Means

None of this means democratic recovery is impossible. There is no determinism here. Ideological trends are genuinely fluid. Political coalitions realign. Crises open unexpected possibilities. A pro-democracy movement gaining traction in the 2030s is not fanciful.

But let us be honest about what that movement would actually be doing. It would not be restoring a pre-existing condition, the way you recover from a cold and return to normal. It would be building something new, from inside a world fundamentally altered by everything described above. The status quo ante of 2015 is not waiting to be retrieved. And even if it were, it was already a system producing the conditions for Trumpism—so retrieving it would not be much of a victory.

A democratic recovery movement in the 2030s would be working with: CASA as constitutional law; Schedule F as administrative reality; $140 billion in immigration enforcement infrastructure as physical fact; a weakened and atrophied Congress conditioned to deference; executive immunity as the legal environment for any challenge; and a public that has spent a decade with the current system as its baseline expectation. Any strategy that does not begin with this honest accounting—that speaks instead of "restoring democracy" as if it were a simple matter of winning enough elections—is not a strategy. It is a comfort narrative.

The real question is harder and more specific: Which craters can be addressed, by which means, on what timeline, by whom, against what organized resistance? For each one. Individually. With honest reckoning about the asymmetry between how easy it was to create the damage and how difficult it will be to address it.

That asymmetry—fast and cheap to destroy, slow and enormously costly to rebuild—is the central political fact of this moment. Naming it honestly is not pessimism. It is the precondition for any strategy serious enough to actually matter.

Monday, June 22, 2026

MAGA's Hot Dog Men

A Vox article, The MAGA stars freaked out by their own movement -- The right’s leading lights are looking for anyone to blame for the right’s growing extremism — except themselves, discusses an interesting observation about some of the MAGA elites who question or occasionally criticize Trump. Despite their vast cluelessness and utterly closed minds, a few elites (former elites actually, they're now in the MAGA doghouse) are experiencing a flicker of recognition that briefly flashes through their minds. Vox quotes this from US Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) in 2017:
“They weren’t voting for libertarian ideas — they were voting for the craziest son of a bitch in the race. And Donald Trump won best in class, as we had up until he came along.” 
Well, that's all well and good, but Massie nonetheless supported Trump for the most part. However despite his support, the “craziest son of a bitch” took Massie down in the last primary in Kentucky. Trump was in a snit because of Massie’s stance on the Epstein files and the Iran war. Trump endorsed Massie’s challenger in KY, and the libertarian got blown right out of his seat in congress.

The Vox article points out that at no point, during or after the race did Massie publicly leap** to the logical next step of reflecting on how his own stupid, morally rotted actions contribute to the “craziest son of a bitch” problem. Massie’s years of vocal support for Trump, and his anti-democracy Tea Party politics, helped turn the GOP into the authoritarian political chaos agent he once criticized and whined about. What an effing blind idiot.

** Well, not much of a leap really. Actually no leap at all. However, a gigantic ego helps keep Massy's mind free of inconvenient reasoning like “Geez Louise, I supported the craziest son of a bitch, but is it possible I could bear some responsibility for my own mistakes? Nah, not possible. Joe Biden and Hunter's laptop did it, not me.”. 

Vox summarizes it like nicely this:
Massie is the poster child for a particular kind of conservative now emerging in Trump’s second term: influential Trump allies who have sounded the alarm about the right’s direction, but who steadfastly refuse to acknowledge that their own actions in the Trump era may have had something to do with it.


The hot dog thing
Vox points out that this phenomenon is somewhat like a real-life version of the famous sketch on Tim Robinson’s show I Think You Should Leave. There, a hot-dog-shaped car crashes into a storefront and a man in a hot dog suit says, “We’re all trying to find the guy who did this.” The “hot dog men” are almost all men are easy to spot. Their painfully slowly growing ranks says something serious. Namely, America's authoritarian radical right-wing political machine is acting in ways that even some of its most aggressive and radical voices are slowly coming to recognize as dangerous or worse. None of the radical authoritarians in the GOP shows any ability to contain or redirect the most tyrannical, most corrupt forces they unleashed.

The core argument Vox is making is pretty simple. A few of the radical right elites have come to a point where MAGA's continuing radicalization has begun to spin out of their control. Those elites thought they were steering the ship, but their ship is the Titanic and they don't know how to steer. Of course, admitting one's error is tough to impossible. admitting culpability for something bad happening is even harder. 

In politics, all movements have had “hot dog men” moments of desperately blaming anyone but themselves for their mistakes. At present, a growing number of hot dog men in the right’s top ranks are still in blame-shifting mode. But, bad as it is, that's significant an improvement over still being in the three monkeys mode where a few, maybe 2% of MAGA elites are firmly nested. They're very busy feathering their nests, while either ignoring evil or supporting it.

The few clueless MAGA elites


Most MAGA elites know exactly 
who and what they stand for, i.e., 
themselves, corruption, tyranny & cruelty

MAGA’s grievous attack on American science


 CONTEXT

Enough time has passed for reasonable assessments of the astounding damage that Trump and MAGA elites have caused and will continue to cause. All major aspects of American society, government, law, science, education, commerce and religion are under relentless attack by authoritarian MAGA extremism.

Trump and MAGA elites make America great again for themselves by destroying what it was and turning it into their plaything for their pleasure and wealth. The elites Trump chooses to run his ghastly horror show are a cadre of absolute loyalists. For the most part, the elites are a group consisting of opportunistic, self-serving authoritarian liars, cranks, crackpots, grifters, theocratic Christian zealots and sex perverts. Yes, that includes grifters and sex perverts. Destroying American science means nothing to them. Link, link, link, link, link, link

Clueless about science, and doesn’t care

The MAGA attack on American science

A NYT opinion, (not paywalled) lays out just some of the vast damage done to science and future research. The op-ed by Jeff Coller, an RNA biologist at Johns Hopkins, uses the origin story of GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy as a parable about the irreplaceable value of basic, curiosity-driven science. The central claim is that the Trump administration’s proposed rule requiring all federal research grants to be approved by political appointees and to “demonstrably advance the president’s policy priorities” would have made drugs like Ozempic impossible to develop.

Coller’s points out that the OMB’s, run by hyper-radical Christian nationalist theocrat Russell Vought, proposed 412-page Regulation for Federal Financial Assistance, published May 29, 2026. Vought’s anti-science rule subordinates peer review to review by political loyalists. Federal research grants now must to align with presidential priorities or they will not be funded. What are the president’s priorities? No one know, including the president. He is clueless about science and doesn’t care about it.

Under Vought’s proposal, the long-standing gold standard of peer review at NIH and NSF gets reduced to a vague “advisory” function with no decision-making power. The OMB is accepting public comments through July 13, 2026. This comes on top of already steep damage: the Trump administration froze or canceled billions in research grants in 2025, courts ordered much of the money released, yet agencies have still funded fewer grants monthly compared to prior years. The White House’s proposed FY2026 budget would cut NSF funding by 56.9% and NIH by 39.3%.

Coller points out accumulating harms. Graduate programs at top research universities reduced fall admissions. That will deplete the next generation of scientists. A cancer researcher Rachel Sirianni told NPR that her promising pediatric brain tumor drug combination had virtually no chance of getting funded today. A report from the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation warned that the current trajectory of science funding cuts could cost the US nearly $1 trillion in economic output over the next decade. Separately, researchers at institutions like the Broad Institute report lab funding cut by one-third to two-thirds, forcing painful choices about which personnel and projects to keep.

MAGA is at war against science in the public interest. Now, whatever is left will be science in the interest of Trump and allied elites. What that will be is unknown to us. Some of the elites probably have an idea of how to piss away our money for their own wealth and power, including serving their extremist ideologies such as laissez-faire capitalism, and bigoted fundamentalist Old Testament Christian theocracy.

Regardless of cynical propaganda that Trump or MAGA elites use to hide what they are doing, e.g., improving efficiency, the evidence is solid that no one can pick the winners of basic research in advance. Science progress is unpredictable and driven by factors such as curiosity. It is not driven by corrupt, crackpot politics. Making science research funding subject to political whim by arrogant, corrupt science ignoramuses, has nothing to do with improving efficiency. That is an anti-efficiency policy. Simply put, MAGA is ending American science in service to the public interest and that is a fact, not an opinion. Link, link

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Book review: The War On Illahee

"Survivors of the Cayuse Indian War" 
Pacific Northwest pioneers with their decorations, June 1902

 Historian Marc James Carpenter’s 2025 book, The War on Illahee: Genocide, Complicity, and Cover-Ups in the Pioneer Northwest, focuses primarily on pioneer conflicts with various native Indian tribes in the Pacific Northwest in the 1840s through the 1850s. The height of the conflict was in 1855-1856. Violence continued sporadically into the 1860s. So far, scholarly analysis of Carpenter’s book seems to be positive. Historians of the Pacific Northwest, Indigenous history, and settler colonialism generally see this book as empirically solid and historically significant. The C-Span series American History TV broadcast an hour lecture by Carpenter talking about his book. Link

A 2020 article Carpenter wrote for the Oregon Historical Quarterly, V. 121(2), pp. 156-185, Pioneer Problems: “Wanton Murder”, Indian War Veterans, and Oregon’s Violent History, gives a nice overview of the whole picture his research is focused on.

In Illahee, Carpenter has meticulously documented (85 pages of detailed footnotes) a horror story of indescribable savagery and sadness. This book is almost as ghastly as Conrad’s fictional tale (based on real events) of human brutality in his 1899 book, Heart of Darkness, about Belgian colonialism in the Congo Free State.

Carpenter spent years researching for this book. To some extent this book challenges some of current spun history about the conflicts. Carpenter found a significant source of about untold events and new information about distorted events in pioneer sources who disagreed among themselves about how to spin what they had done. They wanted to portray murdering white pioneers as heroic innocent people struggling to survive in the face of implacable hostility from native American Indians.

About Illahee, the homeland

Carpenter intentionally tells the history of conflict and death as a widespread war composed of many small to moderate sized conflicts, some of which were given individual names that describe single conflict events as a “war”. Illahee does not refer to any Indian tribe or polity. It is a term that was generally understood among most white pioneers and Northwest Indian tribes to mean “homeland”. Indian tribes and white pioneers believed they were fighting for their rightful homelands. The Indians believed that they owned the land because they had always lived there. By contrast, the pioneers believed it was their land due to either God’s divine will, or because white domination and Indian elimination was inevitable. The dominant pioneer belief was that the Indians were entitled to nothing, including their physical existence. They were subhuman, and therefore owned no land and had no inviolate rights whatsoever.

The few whites who wanted to coexist peacefully with the Indians were seen at best as complicit with Indians, but more likely seen as traitors against the US. Despite their hostility toward co-existence believers, the pioneers in power stopped just short of imprisoning or killing them. But that is what they wanted to do.

Indian treaties: An illusion

Carpenter is blunt that Indian treaties were a shame right from the get go. The dominant pioneer intent was to use treaties to incrementally exterminate all Indians and take their land. In 1884, a former gold miner and soldier, Francis Henry, then a judge, told a gathering of pioneers that the Pacific Northwest Indian wars were:

“but the inevitable continuation of the old story of the colonization and occupation of America by the whites, which has been enacted times without number from the shores of the Atlantic to the Pacific, during the last four hundred years. [It was] simply one of the three incidents of that inevitable destiny which has already subjected the whole continent to the use of civilized man, namely: First, the insidious invasion of the pioneer; second, a treaty by the government with the Indians; and third, their forcible expulsion from that territory to convenient reservations, to be taken from them by the same process at some future time.”

Worse than that, the idea that there was “treaty by the government” is an exaggeration. Local thugs, officials and US military went off on their own, slaughtered or captured Indians and then “negotiated” a treaty that the US government never ratified. Treaty negotiations were routinely fortified by the persuasive tactic of threatening the surviving Indians with total annihilation if they did not agree to whatever terms white people imposed. Death threats were routine, explicit and blunt.

White pioneer war tactics

As one might expect, white brutality was ghastly. Captured Indians were sometimes murdered, with the excuse they were trying to escape. Many or most of those killings were just in cold blood with no reason. When Indians retaliated or tried to defend themselves from unprovoked attack, whites routinely spun that as innocent white people being viciously attacked for no reason. That was fairly common. It was used to justify horrific slaughter of Indians by pioneers.

In their attacks on Indians, pioneers almost never checked to see if the people they were attacking and killing were among those alleged to have attacked or threatened pioneers. The pioneers saw all Indians as a one undifferentiated group. There was routine killings of members of a tribe with no connections to any pioneer threat or conflict. All the Indians looked alike and they were treated alike. “Wrong place, wrong time” turned out to be a lethal reality for a lot of murdered Indians.

In 1855, volunteer pioneer militias in Oregon rampaged aimlessly across the land, attacking nearly all groups of Indian they happened to come across. Although they were largely incompetent in their war effort, they still posed an existential threat to Indian communities. On Dec. 5, 1855, Walla Walla Indian leader and diplomat Yellow Bird (Peo-Peo-Mox-Mox) carrying a truce flag approached pioneers to negotiate a treaty. He was hoping to save what was left of his people from annihilation. The pioneers ignored the truce signal and captured him and killed his treaty party. That touched off running battles. That led the pioneers to murder Yellow Bird, scalp him and cut is body into pieces for trophies. The murder was excused because his killers claimed he was trying to escape. Official accounts from the nominal commander, James Kelly, simply ignored the fact that Yellow Bird came in peace trying to negotiate a treaty.

Yellow Bird (Pew pew mas mas [sic])

Conclusion

Carpenter’s book goes on and on like this for 284 pages. Trigger warning: This book is not for the faint of heart.

A final point. Some of the pioneer leaders of the carnage went on to be state governors, US Senators and other ranking officials. The histories of Oregon and Washington are loaded with people who were, by modern standards, war criminals, virulent racists or both. Some were stone cold killers who won their influence purely on the basis of their savagery. The history they told is very different from the history Carpenter tells. Who is a person to believe?