A half-billion-dollar price tag for Trump's military occupations of US cities is the latest evidence of his escalating authoritarian campaign. President Donald Trump has deployed troops to numerous American cities, including Los Angeles, Washington D.C., Portland, Memphis, and Chicago, with costs exceeding $473 million as of November 15. The deployments are part of a broader effort to quell dissent and intimidate protesters, despite falling crime numbers.
Trump's use of the military for domestic purposes is unprecedented in modern US history. The Insurrection Act, which Trump claims he can invoke at will, has been used only 30 times in U.S. history, according to research by New York University's Brennan Center for Justice. Critics argue that the law is not a blank check and must be interpreted within constitutional limits.
The costs of these deployments have been largely hidden from public view, with the Pentagon refusing to provide figures until recently. The latest estimates come from the National Priorities Project, which tallied the totals using open-source information and costs-per-day estimates supplied by the office of Sen. Dick Durbin.
Trump's military occupations are part of a larger authoritarian agenda that includes a crackdown on domestic enemies, an undeclared war in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean, and a secret list of "designated terrorist organizations." Critics warn that these measures imperil First Amendment rights and threaten democracy itself.
As one critic put it, "Protest plays an essential role in our democracy, and President Trump is hellbent on suppressing it. The president is attempting to normalize military policing of protest, but as the founders of this country made abundantly clear, turning troops on civilians is an intolerable threat to our liberties."
Trump's use of the military for domestic purposes is unprecedented in modern US history. The Insurrection Act, which Trump claims he can invoke at will, has been used only 30 times in U.S. history, according to research by New York University's Brennan Center for Justice. Critics argue that the law is not a blank check and must be interpreted within constitutional limits.
The costs of these deployments have been largely hidden from public view, with the Pentagon refusing to provide figures until recently. The latest estimates come from the National Priorities Project, which tallied the totals using open-source information and costs-per-day estimates supplied by the office of Sen. Dick Durbin.
Trump's military occupations are part of a larger authoritarian agenda that includes a crackdown on domestic enemies, an undeclared war in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean, and a secret list of "designated terrorist organizations." Critics warn that these measures imperil First Amendment rights and threaten democracy itself.
As one critic put it, "Protest plays an essential role in our democracy, and President Trump is hellbent on suppressing it. The president is attempting to normalize military policing of protest, but as the founders of this country made abundantly clear, turning troops on civilians is an intolerable threat to our liberties."