AYLESBURY, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 18: U.S. President Donald Trump arrives by helicopter at Chequers, the country home of the British prime minister, on September 18, 2025 in Aylesbury, England. This is the final day of President Trump’s second UK state visit, with the previous one taking place in 2019 during his first presidential term.  (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)

Donald Trump arrives for a meeting with British Prime Minister Kier Starmer in Aylesbury, England, on Sept. 18, 2025. Photo: Leon Neal/Getty Images

Multibillionaire investor George Soros is not funding a network of militant left-wing activists. That fact has not stopped President Donald Trump from spending the days since Charlie Kirk’s killing calling to press charges against the liberal philanthropist under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations, or RICO, Act for allegedly bankrolling “violent” leftist protests across the country.

This absurd idea is among an array of repressive proposals, ranging from the illegal to the unconstitutional, that Trump and his acolytes have pulled from a cartoonishly blatant playbook of fascist scapegoating — conspiracies of Jewish dark money and all. The Trump administration will likely fail to bring successful prosecutions against the disparate liberal and leftist individuals and organizations they see as a well-funded criminal network. But we are long past the point of pretending the administration will be bound by law, or tethered to factual reality, when it comes to achieving its broader authoritarian goals.

Trump announced on Wednesday night, for example, that he was designating antifa a “major terrorist organization.” The proclamation, posted on Truth Social, is senseless in a number of ways.

[

Related

Trump Wants to Label Antifa a Terror Group. His Real Target Might Be a Lot Bigger.](https://theintercept.com/2025/09/18/trump-antifa-domestic-terrorism/)

Firstly, as has been stated ad nauseam, there is no such organization as “antifa” — an abbreviation of “anti-fascist” — which is a set of practices and militant tactics, deployed by activists for nearly a century. There are groups who come together under the “antifa” banner, but there is zero centralized leadership or membership structure. Secondly, the U.S. has no statutes under which groups are designated domestic terror organizations.

Some might recall Trump’s very similar announcement during the 2020 George Floyd uprisings, when he took pains to target left-wing activists and discredit the Black-led movement. At the time, his tweet did not call into being a non-existent domestic terror statute against a non-existent organization.

It should not be overlooked that since Trump’s first term, all significant efforts to collectively prosecute social justice movements have failed.

On Trump’s 2017 Inauguration Day, over 200 anti-fascist “J20” protesters were mass-arrested and hit with hefty felony riot charges based on no more than presence at the protest; the charges were later dismissed or dropped en masse. Just last week, a judge in Fulton County, Georgia, announced that he was dismissing overreaching RICO charges against 61 participants in the Atlanta-based Stop Cop City movement. The prosecutors’ two-year effort to frame the protest movement as a criminal conspiracy collapsed. [Police officers confront protesters in a gas cloud during a demonstration in opposition to a new police training center, Monday, Nov. 13, 2023, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

Read our complete coverage

The People vs. Cop City](https://theintercept.com/series/cop-city/)

Having reported directly on both the J20 and Stop Cop City cases, I saw firsthand the toll a lengthy prosecutorial process can take on defendants, their supporters, and the entire targeted movement. Prosecutions need not lead to convictions to ruin lives and decimate social movement capacities; federal investigations do not need to have factual basis for their targets to be harassed and intimidated; First Amendment-protected speech can still get you fired. Fear spreads, cowardice abounds, and the real risks of state and state-sanctioned persecution hang over targeted communities.

Prosecutions need not lead to convictions to ruin lives and decimate social movement capacities.

The Atlanta RICO case may have been, as political scientist Joseph Brown told The Guardian, “probably the highest-profile failure of using conspiracy charges to indict a protest movement,” but even malicious prosecutions drain movement resources, both material and emotional, while directly keeping defendants from movement work.

What these cases nonetheless made clear is that collective persecution must be met with collective defense. None of the J20 or Atlanta defendants collaborated with prosecutors or took deals that entailed throwing other movement participants under the bus. Without compliant targets, the meritless cases fell apart.

[

Related

Trump’s Cult of Power Cancels Free Speech](https://theintercept.com/2025/09/19/briefing-podcast-charlie-kirk-trump-right/)

We are today in a very different moment than in Trump’s first term, when the president first attempted to frame antifa as a catch-all boogeyman. Trump’s lawless speech acts are now taken as marching orders by his loyalists in government, law enforcement, and the judiciary.

We have seen the readiness with which institutions will sacrifice their employees and affiliates to appease the president. For failing to sufficiently tow the regime line on canonizing Kirk, ABC pulled comedian Jimmy Kimmel from the air, and the Washington Post fired columnist Karen Attiah. Dozens of workers — including teachers, airline workers, professors, and post office employees — have been fired or placed on leave for online comments deemed wrongspeak about Kirk or his murder. Meanwhile, university administrations nationwide, from Columbia to the University of California, Berkeley, continue to model genuflection and complicity in firing, censuring, and expelling scholars and students for protesting Israel’s genocide.

Trump and his followers’ paranoid projections about a Soros-funded radical left fostered in the Marxist laboratories of U.S. higher education and represented by the Democratic Party are laughably delusional. The tragedy, though, is that while Trump’s chaotic and maximalist crackdown strategy aims to target centrist liberals alongside leftist activists as an imagined whole, there’s little promise that establishment liberal figures and organizations will act with the integrity and solidarity it takes to rebuff such attacks. To neglect to do so would be a grave mistake, morally and strategically, when clear lessons of collective defense are there to be learned.

Trump’s conspiracy about a networked, well-funded greater left is a fiction; a united front against fascism shouldn’t be.

Correction: September 19, 2025, 1:12 p.m. ET.

This story previously referred to Trump’s first Inauguration Day in 2016. He was elected in 2016 and inaugurated in January 2017.

The post Trump’s Idea of the Criminal Left Is a Fiction. A Coordinated Defense Against His Fascism Shouldn’t Be. appeared first on The Intercept.


From The Intercept via this RSS feed

  • futuresdumb@piefed.social
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    4
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    4 days ago

    When they said the future would be like Star Trek, I didn’t realize they meant the Borg.

    The future is dumb.

    • Zorque@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      4 days ago

      Nah, it’s more like the WWIII drug-addicted soldiers. Saying it’s like the borg implies some sort of collective intelligence. It’s more about belligerence and selfishness.

  • the_mighty_kracken@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    4 days ago

    He knows it’s fiction. These are standard authoritarian propaganda tactics. We are very close to, if not already, past the end of democracy in America. Will we have free and fair midterm elections? I wouldn’t count on it.