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September 26, 2025

Chestertown Spy

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Point of View Opinion

We Have Been Here Before By Aubrey Sarvis

September 8, 2025 by Aubrey Sarvis 3 Comments

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As Yogi Berra, the American baseball catcher, power hitter, acclaimed coach, and master of malapropisms said, “It’s déjà vu all over again.” Sadly, Yogi was right.

Almost daily now in América the blowhard president rolls out a barrage of angry threats and insults, often followed by sweeping power grabs. No restraint: he can’t hold back, repeatedly bellowing delusions of grandeur and colossal made-up war and peace accomplishments.  Most can see what those claims really are.  With a casual shrug he makes an indifferent attempt to assure us he is neither a bully nor a dictator, and then proceeds to unleash a fiery gambit of raw revenge upon people, including former advisors and generals he appointed, who dare to resist – who refuse to remain silent, bend a knee, or slink away when he tries to fire them without cause.

For those who stand in his way, this crazed pot belly bully, and his wretched flunkies go into full-throttle revenge, unleashing the vast powers of the federal government against them. He also personally orders government security protection revoked immediately, thereby exposing these patriots to foreign agents who have vowed to kill them. He also orders masked ICE agents to storm into homes and offices to seize laptops, phones, and files.  Our president brags and cheers when his critics must hire lawyers to keep their jobs, retirement pay, good names, and defend themselves against his complicit cabinet which controls vast levers of our government.

These chilling outtakes are part and parcel of an efficient police state, but most of us are ignoring or blocking out what is going on in plain sight. While the American flag still flies high over federal buildings, only days ago the exuberant Secretary of Labor announced she was flying a red, white, and blue Trump portrait flag over the U. S. Labor Department in Washington. No one should be surprised when more symbols of Trump power wave high over more federal buildings around the country, and even fewer should be taken aback when the Trump cabinet and donors tell the Governor of South Dakota that President Trump must be added to that colossal sculpture carved with Presidents Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Roosevelt on Mount Rushmore in the Black Hills.  They are serious.

Examine closely haunting and historic black and white photographs of the 237-year-old Brandenberg Gate, Berlin’s most famous landmark, when it was flying shocking symbols of Nazi power during the Holocaust.  Hard to believe that Greek revival was originally called the “Peace Gate.”  The British bombed most of it down during the end of WWII.  In case you hadn’t noticed, we Americans have been living in our police state for months. Many are increasingly cautious about speaking up, some afraid of the presidential retribution they have witnessed. Some now speak guardedly about Trump overreach. Oh, please, you may be thinking, what nonsense. I don’t know of anyone today afraid of Washington or the president.  Really.

The president continues to demonize and deport immigrants, and he has authorized thousands of masked ICE agents and workers to help him, whopping deficits be damned. He hasn’t forgotten foreigners, especially those from “bad countries who are not nice,” but understand this.  Donald J. Trump’s primary target today is blacks in America. United States black citizens.  He has made this unequivocal:

I don’t want you here.  You don’t belong.

In this matter Donald J. Trump has been consistent.  Racism is his brand.  He and his father practiced notorious discrimination for years in Queens when they were Section 8 housing landlords.  His racist history surfaced again in his Central Park Five 1989 full-page controversial ad he took out in the New York Times falsely accusing five Harlem teenagers of raping a white woman jogging in the park.  The men spent decades in prison wrongly convicted and Trump never apologized; never said he was wrong. He is incapable of uttering those words.  He wears his Central Park Five role and his full-page ad as a badge of honor; he thinks it continues to enhance his brand.

He also believes his long campaign against Black America will be his legacy.  He believes the American people are with him on this.  He believes, this second time in the White House, he will implement his racist goal on behalf of all the people of these United States.  He believes this is his moment to undo and end what this country has been striving and failing to become since the end of the American Civil War.

The Trump playbill is not new.  It’s a tired revival straight out of the playbook of another former not so bright President of the United States who often compared himself to Christ.  Andrew Johnson.  The sitting vice-president who took office the day after Lincoln was assassinated at Ford’s Theater in Washington, D.C.

Trump and many in his coalition are itching to take America back to those ugly years following the end of our deadly Civil War when newly freed people wanted to make their way and mark in America, but President Andrew Johnson and Southern governors were determined no such thing was going to happen.

That steely determination in large part continued until Thurgood Marshall, NAACP chief counsel lawyer, Solicitor General of the United States, and first African- American Justice on the Supreme Court, argued in Brown v. Board of Education:

“The only thing that can be is an inherent determination that the people who were formerly in slavery, regardless of anything else, shall be kept as near that stage as possible, and now is the time, we submit, that this Court should make it clear that is not what our Constitution stand for.”

All the justices agreed.  The Court struck down the Flessy v. Ferguson “separate but equal” doctrine, which was never equal; and, unfortunately, Brown did not end segregation.  That struggle continues today, and the current occupant of the White House rejects equality and opportunity for all as he repeatedly violates the Constitution of the United States.

As a former colleague and civil rights activist and scholar from Richmond reminded me this week, “After the Civil War those freed Blacks enjoyed a period of electoral power and control of government.  States, such as South Carolina, had a population of Blacks that exceeded the white population enough to enable the election of Black men who were sent to serve as Members of the House of Representatives.   Black men could vote with relative freedom under the protection and presence of the Federal government. “

Reconstruction ended in 1877 with withdrawal of Federal troops from the South, and white resistance and discriminatory policies kicked in which essentially restored the indicia of slavery in all aspects of Black life, including a sustained campaign to deny Black men the voting franchise which ushered in Jim Crow which would stay in place until the enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

My Richmond friend and scholar also underscored how deep the White resentment against Black progress went, shameful and deadly events, most of which were not taught in the “History of South Carolina” textbook and the course I took in my segregated high school, certainly not a word about the 1898 massacre of Blacks in Wilmington, North Carolina when Whites revolted against Black rule that ended with over 200 deaths and the destruction of a successful and prosperous Black community; nor did my textbook mention festering white resentment of Black economic and social success leading to the Tulsa Race Riot which resulted in 300 deaths and over 10,000 Black people left homeless.  It was the destruction of what had become known as Black Wall Street.  The town was Greenwood, Oklahoma. White people destroyed it.

These deadly clashes were among the ugliest chapters in our history.  President Trump and those who penned Project 2025 for him, White House deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller, and most in the Trump cabinet, including the OMB Director, recklessly, incredibly, seem to be saying by many of their acts and deeds, let’s have it out; let’s get this business settled once and for all.

We have been here before.

There is nothing about this unpredictable and frightening moment that is big or beautiful or great for America.  And there is no joy or grace or generosity coming from this White House as we approach autumn. The Trump fall of 2025 is about more greed, more financial gain, over one billion and counting for the Trump family in less than eight months, according to the Wall Street Journal; enriching more millionaires and billionaires, more revenge, dispatching young American soldiers to our streets for questionable political purposes, and selecting a young Colorado beauty pageant winner to instruct seasoned professional Smithsonian curators and historians on what is art and what is history. So little time, so much more to do this fall to keep Black America down.  The mad man who thinks he can do anything because he is president still roams the White House corridors.  We may try to ignore or tolerate some of the madness this sick man is doing, but we do so at our own considerable peril.  In a short time, he has done considerable harm with the help of his Congress and this Supreme Court.

This president keeps teeing up the same question our young country grappled with over two hundred years ago. Is America going to be an interracial democracy, one that believes in emancipation for all?  We do. Those fundamental questions have been settled, or so we thought.

We must face that President Trump and company don’t like or agree with our Constitution and what we thought were basic truths. Trump is not looking for an intelligent debate. He demands. He is demanding a redo as he challenges our norms and laws, many of which he doesn’t understand. This is what his Project 2025 is about.  He is hell bent on this dangerous confrontation no matter the price, no matter how many may be killed.

We have been here before.

Vernon Jordan, civil rights activist and lawyer, former head of the National Urban League, trusted advisor to presidents and scores of civil rights trailblazers, and friend to hundreds of students and young and not so young lawyers, including me, said, “We have been here before.”

Vernon Jordan was addressing all of us during those disastrous and threatening early months of Trump’s first presidency. He assured us we would survive and prevail.  He shared those comforting words when Harvard Law honored him.  I heard Vernon deliver that same hopeful and challenging message in Rankin Memorial Chapel at Howard University to students, family, and old and new friends.  You can find his entire inspiring sermon of hope in the Vernon Jordan Law Library at the Howard University School of Law.  Mr. Jordan was also a marvelous preacher and teacher; he let lawyers know much more is expected of us.

Mr. Jordan also said something else in “We Have Been Here Before” that we should always remember.

“We shall once again endure,” he began, “but we don’t sing we endure.  We sing we shall overcome!”  His cadence and pitch perfect, his passion and determination rousing.

 

Aubrey Sarvis is an Army veteran, retired lawyer and corporate officer.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Opinion

Federal Harm Registry Seeks Reports from Citizens Hurt by Trump Policies By Gren Whitman

August 29, 2025 by Spy Desk 12 Comments

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Last January 20, President Trump raised his hand to swear that he’d “preserve, protect, and defend” the United States Constitution.

Upon taking the oath, Trump immediately ordered his minions — guided by the extremist right-wing text, “Project 2025” — to carry out an across-the-board assault on the federal government and various private institutions. Six months later, his assault continues.

Many American citizens have been harmed to date by Trump’s betrayal, and many more will be injured until his depredations are stopped.

Welcome to the Federal Harm Registry. Initiated and managed by the Maryland Democratic Party, this registry offers an immediate remedy to Trump, and a tangible means to fight Trumpism.

The Federal Harm Registry is designed to document the myriad adverse effects of Trump’s maladministration. It’s the tool to register specific harms that citizens have experienced or witnessed. No matter if we are Democrats, Republicans, or Independents, we must be active, not passive.

The Federal Harm Registry is a space for Maryland residents to report their personal stories — cuts to health care, higher living costs, job losses, housing problems, civil rights attacks, or any other consequences of this administration’s harmful policies. These reports will document and provide a guide for the eventual reversal of what’s happening in Maryland and in D.C.

Consider:

  • As a college student, have you been denied a Pell grant?
  • Has your family been denied SNAP benefits?
  • As a farmer, is your corn or soybean crop losing its value?
  • Have you lost your Medicaid?
  • Have you been harmed by work requirements for Medicaid and food stamps?
  • Has your child’s vaccine become unavailable because of an HHS mandate?
  • As a federal employee, have you been laid off or fired without cause?
  • Have you been arrested by ICE?
  • Have you been terminated from the U.S. military because of your sexual identity?
  • Are Trump’s illegal tariffs forcing you spend more for food and other necessities?
  • Do you know anyone adversely affected by the closure of Head Start for poor children, as well as child welfare, juvenile justice, and youth care programs?

The Federal Harm Registry invites Marylanders to document each type of damage to them from harmful federal policies under Trump. The registry also offers Marylanders a megaphone to voice their frustrations and fears, and their vision to improve our country.

So, take your first step to report any harm to you by contacting federalharmmd.com.

At federalharmmd.com, you will be able to:

  • Write or record your story.
  • Report any harm you’ve experienced, share an opinion, expose federal malpractices, and advocate for policies that help — not injure — Maryland families.
  • Help to publicize the Federal Harm Registry by sharing on Facebook, X, or LinkedIn.

If you have been harmed by Trump’s maladministration, the information you provide will be used to build a movement for economic justice and dignity. Your party affiliation is of no concern; all are welcome.

Together we can catalog the evils done by Trump’s dangerous, faux populism that’s hurting so many by reporting our injuries to the Federal Harm Registry. Consider doing so today.

Gren Whitman

Note: This article was initially published in Common Sense for the Eastern Shore.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Opinion

No One Is Coming to Our Rescue By Aubrey Sarvis

August 18, 2025 by Spy Desk 5 Comments

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It certainly won’t be the cavalry. They are occupied elsewhere. This week the President of the United States deployed the cavalry — that would be his D.C. National Guard — to protect District of Columbia citizens and the Washington Monument from violent criminals hanging out in the night around the imposing obelisk on the Mall.

The earnest sergeant in charge of a handful of soldiers had been ordered to demonstrate to the media that the military had arrived in the nation’s capital and all was well. He did his duty. He saluted and sent a partial squad up the paved path to the iconic monument. The soldiers looked about carefully, observed a few puzzled and curious tourists, and then went back down the path. The entire show of force was over in a few minutes. The sergeant couldn’t entirely conceal his embarrassment and bewilderment over the charade he had participated in. Of course he couldn’t.

It was another harebrained and risky scheme from the President, using the military at home to advance his domestic political objectives. It was also expensive, ineffective, and at odds with how most presidents deploy the military. The risks and danger cannot be overstated. One fatal shot on an innocent citizen at home and no one knows what happens next and how it all ends. This week the President has his military policing streets in Washington, D.C. In June it was his California Guard and combat-ready Marines policing in Los Angeles over the objections of the mayor. He recently said he might send his troops next to police Chicago.

We must face it. The President is mad. Say it clearly. Firmly. Make sure the people hear you. There is little doubt. The President is mad, dangerously mad, as he grabs more power for himself. If we continue to brush aside or ignore the mind-boggling wholesale changes Trump and his henchmen have been up to over the past seven months, we do so at our great peril. The President and his band of frightening toadies are up to nothing short of seizing control of our entire government, our military, corporate America, our public and private institutions, and our very way of life. We must end the denial and this nonsense of telling ourselves there is nothing we can possibly do about the madness and danger going on in Washington. That sort of muddled thinking is precisely what President Trump expects from us. He’s counting on it, confident he will beat us down; and weary Americans, exhausted from Trump fatigue, will continue to sit on the sidelines, foolishly hoping the Trump nightmare ends without lasting harm to the country and those we love.

This alarming chapter in our history doesn’t have to continue or play out the way the mad President and his creepy cronies have put in place and are planning to expand upon. There is a better way, and that may take some of your precious time and talents. It could mean becoming involved politically in your community or state; it could mean giving your money if you have some to spare. Maybe you aren’t ready to join a local political party or organization or give money just yet, but you can certainly figure out where you will be comfortable and helpful politically. Maybe you contribute brains or brawn — or maybe you can bring both to the table.

The important thing is to take that first step politically. Make it small. Do one thing politically you have never done before. If you feel Trump is a danger to your community and country, show it. Maybe you are tired of stale political platitudes rolling off the lips of tired suitors and politicians, show it. Not by more words. As George Bernard Shaw’s Eliza Doolittle may well have said, “Words, words, words! Never do I ever want to hear another single one again. Show me!”

If you are knowledgeable and well-versed in the political issues of the day, you have the opportunity to give and do more where you live and work. Republicans knew how important it was for them to win the House and Senate as well as the White House. If you see how Senate and house races and the road to the White House, coupled with voter turnout, are often tied together, maybe you can help carry that message to your community and candidates.

I can tell you Republicans carried the last elections because they did more work to win. They were better prepared and equipped on several fronts, clearly more engaged and more eager to win, and they showed up. Look to see why millions of registered Democrats didn’t even bother to vote last time. Democrats still haven’t figured out why. Maybe you can help with the why. Have Democrats really lost touch and become overly educated, overly concerned with the rule of law?

Our country is not reserved for the privileged few and assorted hustlers and obsequious hangers-on out to reap millions and billions, score rich federal contracts, and other obscene rewards Trump bestows upon those who bow and dance to his madness. We rejected that royal road nearly two hundred and fifty years ago, and we are not going back to it, as our greedy President and his avarice royalists would have us do.

If enough voters muster up the will and if this struggle for our country’s soul and destiny is important to them, they can and will get back on track. No doubt, at first blush, that sounds sophomoric, straight out of Andy Hardy and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, but it need not be — not if enough people still think the rule of law is important and facts and integrity still matter. They should. A frightening racist bully is loose roaming in the White House corridors. He is mad and ignorant, but he really is President of the United States and determined to control everything.

No matter where we live or work — clerk or Vice President, nurse or doctor, student, retired or looking for work — the color of our skin or where we came from, what political party, if any, we favor, or where we worship or don’t worship, or who we love, it’s up to us to stop this well-oiled Trump march to madness.

No one is coming to your rescue. The President is out to change this country into one you will not recognize. Most Americans do not want WWII Germany and Italy here. Today, the President touts Putin and Netanyahu and ridicules Ukraine’s Zelensky, who is fighting a dictator. Maybe Trump’s vision of a new world order will be Putin and Netanyahu light. Maybe it won’t start out as a total police state. Maybe the nice and right sort and agreeable people will have little to fear. Maybe.

But just this week we saw how Trump would use the military in every state if he were left unchecked. We saw the brilliant mad engineer President dictating how Nvidia, the leading chip manufacturer, and its CEO would get a license to sell AI chips to China and what it would cost them. We heard him say another CEO should be fired. He is out to take over corporate boardrooms and hire the CEOs. And we haven’t heard a peep or objection from the chip industry trade association, the Business Roundtable and their CEOs, or from the Chamber of Commerce. We don’t even know if this chip transaction is legal. Last week we also saw the President very annoyed because he didn’t like statistics coming out from the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. So immediately he fired her with much fanfare, claiming, without any documentation, the mean career civil servant had manipulated unfavorable labor numbers to make him look bad. A few days later he announced he was hiring his own economist from the Heritage Foundation to do the labor statistics for him. Not a peep from the bankers who rely upon credible numbers to help maintain a strong dollar and attract foreign investors looking for a safe and reliable place to park their money and invest. This week the busy President also found time to extract more money and concessions from another university foolish enough to think they can meet his changing demands. The Paul Weiss law firm in New York and Columbia University and the other cowering university and college presidents, along with Republican senators, all forgot or never knew rule number one on the playground: you can never make a deal with a crazed bully. He always comes back. The danger is real.

But in recent days, notwithstanding a frenzy of presidential deals, announcements, threats, armed service members in combat gear and heavy combat vehicles in the Washington streets, an upcoming major summit in Alaska, appearing up on the White House roof, and zipping over to the heavily guarded Kennedy Center to brag about his show business chops and announce (guess what) — roll the drums — he, the newly installed Chairman of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, would MC this year’s televised Kennedy Center Honors in December, still, the President, privately, had his own real and present danger to deal with. While he may have distracted the media temporarily, he still feared one person, and he knew she wasn’t going away, and he knew precisely what she wanted.

Ghislaine Maxwell. The woman who may know too much. The woman who may have her own private Epstein files with videos and recordings stashed away. The woman who was in the room, often in bed with Epstein and underage girls 14 and 15. The woman who knew who came and who went. She also knew the “security cameras” were rolling 24/7 in every bedroom and every bathroom in every home Epstein owned around the world.

Ghislaine Maxwell, with her electronic files, could bring Trump world tumbling down. Maybe a mad Trump really could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and get away with it, as he once boasted. However, I don’t think he survives a Ghislaine Maxwell bombshell with her files — if she can take away his “credible deniability.” And if she takes that same “deniability” away from MAGA and the Christian Right and Fox News, she is not safe in any federal prison. She knows what happened to Epstein in jail; she figures, and rightly so, that her chances of staying alive are better on the outside. For Ghislaine Maxwell, the sooner the better — and only Trump can make that happen. How ironic that these two should fear one another and, at the same time, desperately need each other.

Aubrey Sarvis

Army veteran, retired lawyer and corporate officer.

 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Archives, Opinion

Journalism Is Not a Crime, but Witness Intimidation Is by Will Fries

August 15, 2025 by Letter to Editor 1 Comment

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A functioning democracy depends on people who are willing to speak up when they see wrongdoing. Sometimes those people testify in a courtroom. Sometimes they write an article. In either case, the principle is the same: the public deserves to know what happened, and those who share that knowledge must be free from retaliation.

When a journalist reports on possible violations of the law, that journalist is not simply telling a story. They are documenting facts that may become part of a civil or criminal case. Maryland Criminal law recognizes this reality. Sections 9-302, 9-303, and 9-305 of the Criminal Law Article make it illegal to harm, threaten, or intimidate a witness. That protection extends to anyone who reports misconduct that could reasonably lead to legal action. This includes journalists who investigate and publish credible accounts of official misdeeds.

Defamation, when used to falsely damage the credibility of such a journalist, can itself amount to an attempt to harm or retaliate against a witness. A baseless public accusation that a reporter has misrepresented facts does not just injure reputation; it can discourage future reporting, undermine the public record, and obstruct the flow of truthful information to the community.

Journalism has built-in processes to contest and resolve any items that may need correction or clarification. Reporters maintain detailed, dutiful records to support their assertions, and they follow rigorous standards to verify facts before publication. Disagreement with reporting is part of public debate, but false attacks that ignore these processes cross the line into intimidation.

History shows that attempts to silence reporters often fail. Journalists tend to be persistent, and they support one another when one of their own comes under attack. In newsrooms, at press associations, and through professional networks, reporters share resources, check each other’s work, and defend each other’s credibility. This solidarity is not just a matter of loyalty. It is a recognition that the integrity of the press is a shared resource, and when it is attacked, everyone in the profession has a stake in the defense.

Officials who try to discourage reporting by smearing those who do it misunderstand both the press and the public. Facts have staying power. Once published, they can be checked, confirmed, and preserved. Attempts to bury them often have the opposite effect, drawing more attention to the very information someone hoped to suppress.

The public, too, has a role in this equation. When voters and readers refuse to accept intimidation as politics as usual, they reinforce the expectation that truth will be met with accountability, not retaliation. That expectation is the foundation of public trust, and it is worth guarding.

Maryland law is unambiguous: reporting wrongdoing is not a crime. Trying to punish or silence someone for doing it may be. Journalists, as witnesses to the public’s business, will keep reporting. Their work is backed by careful documentation and professional standards, and the law is on the side of those who refuse to be intimidated.

Will Fries is a writer in Salisbury, Maryland. Find more at Watershed Observer.

[This opinion is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.]

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Op-Ed, Opinion

It’s Time to Build – Without Burdening Taxpayers By Support Our Schools (SOS), Kent County, MD

August 8, 2025 by Spy Desk 3 Comments

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“I think the county can afford to build a new school. And it will not burden the taxpayers.”

– Kent County Commissioner John Price, August 5, 2025

This bold and encouraging statement—delivered at the August 5th meeting of the Kent County Commissioners—could mark a turning point for the future of education in Kent County. Diligent financial analysis by Commissioner John Price and County CFO Pat Merritt has yielded a clear and achievable plan for building the new middle school our community so urgently needs—without raising taxes.

Let us repeat that: we can build a new school without raising taxes.

The current middle school is a liability to our students and an embarrassment to our community. Built in 1946 and last renovated in 1975, it suffers from broken floors, leaking ceilings, rampant mold, and plumbing so old that students had to miss several days of school last year. Needless to say, the school also falls far short in meeting the technological and learning opportunities our students need and deserve.

From comprehensive strategic planning, to unanimous support of the Board of Education, to lobbying our state representatives for financial assistance, work on the project has been under way since 2017—only to be consistently stalled by lack of funding.

Now that barrier has been lifted. Due to Commissioner Price’s leadership, we have a plan forward.

Here’s what Commissioner Price’s financial analysis identified:

  • Nearly $1 million in annual savings from changes in the county correctional system, shifting from operating a full local facility to utilizing an existing MOU with neighboring counties to house Kent County inmates — without cutting any jobs or benefits for county employees.
  • $947,000 in reduced annual debt service costs.
  • New revenue projections of $3.3 million for the next fiscal year.
  • A tax increase already in effect, generating $250,000 in year one and growing to $700,000 annually — no further tax increases required.
  • $13 million in available capital in the county’s undesignated fund balance, specifically earmarked for capital projects like school construction.

Using a combination of these resources, along with a bond to cover the local share of construction, the county can move forward now—responsibly, affordably, and without delay.

And—it bears repeating—without raising taxes.

This plan should be put to a vote at an upcoming County Commissioners meeting to give the Board of Education the decision they need to move forward. Now is the time for our community to voice their enthusiastic support for this proposal to channel fiscal inefficiency into transformative opportunity for our students.

Commissioner Price has reached out to SOS to say he welcomes feedback from the community about the plan, but would like to make clear that there is still work to be done to raise more funds for the project at the state level.

We urge all Kent County residents to thank Commissioner Price for his detailed, data-driven plan and to encourage all three commissioners to move forward with this exciting opportunity to fund our new school.

We must let the Commissioners know that we see a new middle school as a necessary investment in our children’s future, our community’s growth, and our county’s long-term vitality.

Here’s how you can help:

  • Submit a letter of support to the County Commissioners: https://forms.gle/G8LkJMf1BgUoKXoD7
  • Watch the 8/5/25 Commissioner’s meeting and hear the proposal for yourself: https://www.youtube.com/live/45a7PGc_ri8?si=dm_IfsOb1ab5ulPC&t=1833
  • Share this article—and your support for the new school—with your friends and neighbors.

Thank you for helping to ensure Kent County students have the learning environments they deserve.

And thank you, Commissioner Price, for leading the way forward. SOS is excited to be your champion and partner in the work ahead.

— Support Our Schools (SOS)

Kent County, Maryland

About KCPS SOS

Formed in 2015, we are a grassroots effort devoted to increasing awareness of and support for the needs, challenges, and untapped potential of the Kent County public school system – both for the sake of the current student population and for its opportunity to serve as a catalyst for economic development. Founding members include Robbi Behr, Jodi Bortz, Piers Heriz-Smith, Rebecca Heriz-Smith, Francoise Sullivan, and Elizabeth Tussing.

For more information on SOS please visit our Facebook group  https://www.facebook.com/groups/kentcountyschooldistrictparents/

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Archives, Op-Ed, Opinion

Urgent Request to Prioritize Construction of a New Middle School By John Queen

July 29, 2025 by Spy Desk 9 Comments

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Dear County Commissioners,

My name is John Queen, and I serve as a member of the Kent County Board of Education. I am writing to urgently and unequivocally request that you prioritize the construction of a new middle school for the students and families of Kent County. The current Kent County Middle School (KCMS) has reached a critical point. Its aging infrastructure, persistent maintenance issues, limited accessibility, and outdated design make it no longer simply an educational concern—it is now a matter of health, safety, and equity. This facility no longer meets the needs of our students, teachers, or community.

At Kent County Public Schools, our mission is to prepare every student to reach their highest potential. That requires safe, modern, and fully equipped learning environments. KCMS, in its current state, cannot support this mission. Kent County is a proud rural community known for its resilient spirit. A new middle school represents more than a building—it is an investment in the future vitality of our county. We understand that such a project requires bold leadership, thoughtful planning, and significant funding, but the long-term benefits far outweigh the cost.

This is not merely a request—it is a call to action.

Unfortunately, leadership on this issue has fallen short. At the July 22nd Commissioners meeting, Commissioner John Price proposed a letter to the State opposing the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future. This is not the leadership we need. Rather than reject the Blueprint, we should work collaboratively to address the unique challenges small, rural districts face—in particular, fluctuating enrollments and constrained local funding.

Our other commissioners have done little but paid lip service to the issue. In an October 2024 article in the Baltimore Banner, Commissioner Albert Nickerson acknowledged the tension between progress and tradition yet offered no solutions. Perhaps most remarkable moment came at a recent commissioner’s meeting. In contradiction to the recent comprehensive feasibility study, years of community engagement and activism, and a Board of Education vote, Commissioner Ron Fithian proposed redeveloping Worton Elementary as an alternative to constructing a new middle school. At that meeting, the commissioners ultimately approved 1 million dollars in repairs to the vacant elementary school’s roof as part of a hasty “alternative plan” to repurpose the old, closed school—something that gets us no closer to a true solution to our systemic problems with our aging educational infrastructure.

Why are we back to square one on this problem when our community has already identified viable solutions? The redevelopment of the Worton campus was eliminated through the feasibility study for good reasons—it, too, needs major repairs and even if it gets them, the school is nowhere close to a modern educational facility. The new middle school construction site in Chestertown is both strategic and equitable—home to over one-quarter of the county’s population and one-fifth of its property wealth, while occupying only 1% of its land. It is a strategic location that makes sense.

Our schools are the more than just spaces to learn and grow. For the 80% of KCPS students that live in poverty, a quality education in a safe, modern building is one of the clearest paths to prosperity and success. The responsible course of action—indeed, the only course—is to float the $30 million bond and allocate funding consistently over the next thirty years.

There is no alternative. Our students and teachers cannot wait, and our entire community deserves better. We must act now.

Sincerely,
John Queen
Board Member
Kent County Board of Education

 

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Filed Under: Op-Ed, Opinion

The Year of Wishful Thinking and Broken Promises By Aubrey Sarvis

July 7, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

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The jubilant House of Representatives leadership claimed their narrow win, 218-214, on the President’s reckless and cruel tax bill was a “wonderful thing for all Americans.”  For the loyal and faithful Christian right, House Speaker Mike Johnson, on cue, insisted, “a lot of credit goes to God and freedom loving Members of the House who have been working on the President’s bill for over a year.”  But it fell to the peppy Republican Chairwoman of the House Conference Committee, Lisa McCain (R-Mich), to put a winning face on the wobbly sow she had just voted to heap upon her unsuspecting constituents outside of Detroit.  “This bill.” she declared beaming, “is about putting more money in the pockets of more Americans.”

Now why would a perfectly pleasant looking mother with four photogenetic children repeatedly spew out such nonsensical rubbish? Greed and ambition.  Lisa McCain is eager to do what it takes to play big in Trump’s world and she expects to be rewarded.

Belatedly, some have decided enough.  Time to take exception to and challenge Trump and his battalion of liars, posers, and zealots. They might begin with the facts, challenge the wishful thinking, and confront the shameless McCain liars.  The bill just passed, plain and simple, is Trump’s ugly sow.  Sows need a lot of slopping.  They love to wallow in the slushy mud and tumble in the mire and then wobble back to the trough for more slopping.  Make sure Trump and every Republican who fed and kept this greasy sow alive is stuck in their swampy pen with the ugly sow they sired.

Lisa McCain and the Republicans know Trump’s massive bill puts more money in the pockets of the rich and super rich capitalists and pays for some of that historic largess by taking away Medicaid health and hospital care and food from the very poor, including children and seniors.   Lisa McCain didn’t misspeak.  She may even believe part of what she said.  After all this is the same careless congresswoman who recently claimed Social Security payments were going to people born 150 years ago; the same Congresswoman who in 2022 declared Trump had “caught Osama bin Laden.”

The mean, wacko, and reckless Trump sow, H.R. 1, is about money and who gets what, and a total lack of concern for the poor and those in need. This perverse Trumpian show includes the classical elements of arrogance, entitlement, and hubris.  Indisputably President Trump controls the executive and legislative right down to dictating the day and hour the House convenes and adjourns, and he may be close to capturing the judiciary.  Trump and his team are dancing and popping corks.  They are on a roll.  They may have also convinced themselves that they can do no wrong and are entitled to do pretty much what they can get away with while they control the levers of power or until they are stopped.

That arrogance and swagger of power was painfully apparent July 4th, the day of our country’s birthday, when the president with his detached first lady in summer white, standing by his side, went on and on with his tired shtick out on the Truman balcony before he signed his reckless bill into law.  Only Trump would try to make our country’s birthday celebration about him and his recent steamrolling the House and Senate again.  Only Trump would have the hubris to suggest that his great tax bill is up there with our country’s accomplishment of two hundred and forty-nine years of a consecutive functioning democracy.

Only Trump would have the chutzpah to use the Social Security Administration on July 4th to send out the message below to every Social Security recipient in America:

“The Social Security Administration (SSA) is celebrating the passage of the One Beautiful Bill, a landmark piece of legislation that delivers long-awaited tax relief to millions of older Americans.”

This free political flier from a federal government agency paid for by U. S. taxpayers is outrageous and illegal, and straight out of the Trump playbook.  The day Trump signed his reckless tax bill into law he officially launched his campaign of lies and distortions to sell the American people on what he did for them in his 900 plus pages tax bill.

He is now in campaign mode to convince American voters he kept his promises to the working class and seniors; he never touched Medicaid; never added trillions to our debt nor kicked millions of Americans off health care; he never lied to the American people; and most especially, he wants you to know he loves you; he never left you.  Don’t keep your distance (don’t abandon me and the Republican senators and members of the House I own in next year’s election).

I kept my promise; don’t keep your distance. I never sought fame nor fortune; I never invited them in, though it seemed to the world that was all I desired. I haven’t made hundreds of millions in my first six months in office, no matter the fake Wall Street Journal and New York Times documents.

I love you and hope you love me. One look at me and you know it’s true.  I made America great and strong and safe and beautiful again, and I did it for you.

This blueprint is straight out of his all-time favorite Broadway musical “Evita,” based upon his favorite fascist political operatives Juan and Eva Person.  (Why do you think he loves waving to his people from his Truman balcony?)  Trump just put Democrats on notice this is how he is going to sell his unpopular ugly sow bill to America and beat Democrats again next year. Even Fox News admits the Trump sow is hugely unpopular and a big gamble for Republicans.

Still, Trump may well sell his ugly and wobbly sow. Notwithstanding the Trump madness and corruption, his lack of focus and discipline, as well as a noticeable declining ability to respond in real time to a direct question, he remains a proven salesman with a remarkable track record when scripted.

If Democrats are going to take back the House and regain some measure of power, they will have to outsell the President.  That will take selling the American people with specifics on a more solid, measurable, and reasonable way forward as they reconnect with millions of Americans they lost over the past two decades.  Democrats must touch, connect, and enlist new Democrats. That challenge will require a campaign against the sow H.R. 1, and a team equipped to fight, communicate, and win. This requires putting together the team and plan in the next 90 days.

One starting point for Democrats to reconsider is where they stand on spending for defense. There is a hard-core group of Democrats who have taken pride for much too long in never having voted for a defense spending bill. Nancy Pelosi tried without much success to change that.  With real dangers coming from China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran, rigid opposition to an effective military is a recipe for remaining in the minority for decades.  How do you put up a yard sign touting support for Ukraine and then vote against a bill to pay for the weapons and service members to wage that fight? Trump is foolish and dead wrong on Ukraine.

Lastly, for over fifty-five years Republicans and Democrats both failed to secure our borders.  That delay and neglect came crashing down during President Biden’s watch, and Trump seized on the Biden ineptness and inability to act and made that a winning campaign issue. Most voters favor enforcing border security.  What Democrats oppose is the unlawful and often inhumane and uneven way Trump goes about enforcement. It is not a sign of weakness to admit Trump has been right or partially right on some key issues.  In fact, candor may well make Democrats more accessible and appealing to more voters.

There are stark and Important differences between how Republicans and Democrats act, give and take, allocate, and govern today; and those differences and inequities are reflected in the tight vote count on Trump’s not so beautiful sow H.R. 1.  Democrats must connect with and sell America on a clear message.

Aubrey Sarvis,

Army veteran and retired lawyer

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Op-Ed, Opinion

Not Normal: Where Are We Going? By Aubrey Sarvis

June 14, 2025 by Opinion 5 Comments

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This has been a deeply troubling and dangerous week, complete with risky calls and delicate dances, some high wire acts in the streets of Los Angles without safety nets.  We see good and bad and ugly players, and, yet, somehow, cool and measured LA professionals on the scenes have contained most of the chaos in the streets without deadly violence.   Nearly everyone is rooting for the soldiers and Marines and policewomen and men who have been thrown together and expected to manage and control legal and illegal immigrants, aggressive ICE agents and frustrated demonstrators, most peaceful, a few violent.

This concocted political show of excessive force and power and danger is unfolding live on television in the city of make believe with thousands of extras straight out of a lavish Cecil B. DeMille production. The star, of course, even when he is not on camera, is none other than our President of the United States.  It’s his show, another Trump theatrical production conceived for MAGA believers and Fox News distribution but paid for by taxpayers of the United States. Trump, ever the cheap blowhard producer, never picks up the bills. (That’s for losers.)

Our president who moonlights as playwright, theater critic, and head of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts gives his frightening California show and inept contract players—Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, House Speaker Mike Johnson, and Senate and House Republicans smashing reviews. Five stars, Trump’s highest rating, for his compliant confederacy of dunces.  And our president has no doubt America loves his phony strong man act, that it will play to sold out houses for years, breaking all records, including those for the Nazi satire “The Producers”.

Our president isn’t interested in lowering the volume as we approach the 250th birthday celebration of the U.S. Army.  No, he is reveling in his ugly and shocking show of force and itching for a bloody fight. The visuals and dangers become more disturbing and apparent with each passing day. Indeed, with each passing hour.

This is not normal, not in the United States of America.

Fascism arrived unannounced early Thursday afternoon inside a nondescript Los Angeles federal building when federal agents threw down and handcuffed a United States Senator who had identified himself to the Homeland Security Secretary holding a press conference there.  The first duly elected Latino United States Senator was attempting to ask the Secretary important questions on behalf of his constituents. Millions saw the stunning and bold takedown and heard the Senator identify himself, and we should be very afraid.  This happened in the very building in which the senator works when he is in LA.

This is not normal, not in the United States of America.

The president isn’t ready to call off his menacing henchmen.  The creator, artistic director, producer, and bully-in-chief of this mean mess is threatening to take his alarming strong man act on the road.  Another opening, another show.  He said maybe Atlanta, Dallas, D. C., and New York City.  Foley Square!  His Marines on Broadway!  George M. Cohen was there with “Over There” and, after all, if George Clooney can play Broadway and be nominated for a Tony, why not POTUS who can order up his Marines as extras and props.

The LA Trump show opened just as the president envisioned.  Television networks fell in line immediately.  They stopped or curtailed their coverage of his big, beautiful tax bill stalled in the Senate, and pretty much forgot about the promised tariff deals that never materialized, and the Musk Trump breakup quickly became page 10 gossip.  Little and big screens and niche podcasters and young influencers began running Trump’s free content 24/7 – all showing how he and his ICE team were rounding up illegal and legal immigrants, be they at work or home or in schoolhouses or in the streets.

To interject immediate drama and ensure attention grabbing headlines and millions of cool hits, the president ordered National Guard troops to Los Angeles over the objections of the mayor and governor, both of whom insisted that local and state police trained in law enforcement were managing a tough situation on the ground well and federal troops were not needed.

Some of the most disturbing images in recent days were those of physically fit young combat airborne soldiers at Fort Bragg wearing red berets seated directly behind President Trump as he delivered a blistering political speech.  It doesn’t matter that those young soldiers volunteered and were screened to be in the prop.  That backdrop was straight out of the president’s campaign playbook.  It was implicit that those patriotic soldiers supported him and his tirade in a political speech.

That is not normal in the United States of America.

In fact, service members are explicitly prohibited from attending or participating in political rallies in uniform. Even the stumbling, bumbling Secretary of Defense knows that.  I believe Hegseth orchestrated the Bragg event.  After all, he is the president’s military cultural warrior.

Perhaps the most troubling aspect of what we witnessed at Fort Bragg was the unabashed and defiant racism on full display by the president and the secretary.  Everyone should understand those two bullies chose Fort Bragg to gloat and kick off the Army’s 250th birthday celebration because of its naming history and acts of bigotry and white supremacy.

We Americans do not celebrate bigotry and white supremacy and racist generals in our military today.

That is not normal today, and it is not who we in these United States of America are today.  Yes, we are striving to become better and embrace equality for all. Yes, we are a work in progress, and we are determined to forge ahead, not fall back.

A final thought as we old soldiers celebrate the 250th anniversary of our United States Army.  Some of my friends in the sixties sweated out being called for Vietnam.  They took advantage of the college deferments as long as they could and prayed hard for a lucky number in the draft lottery.  None of us faulted them for doing so.  Only a few of them ended up being called, but the ones who were called went.  However, one of my college classmates fled to Canada where he remained for decades. He apologized for doing so before he died.

That apology was authentic and acceptable.  The shameful way the President of the United States is using the army and military during this celebration is not acceptable.

His behavior is not normal.

The very least our president can do is salute the Army, and try very, very hard not to hog the celebration.  This important celebration is not about the young Donald Trump or bone-spurs or his 79th birthday.  The President of the United States had repeated opportunities in the mid and late sixties to be a part of the United States Army.  He used his father’s wealth, privileged position, and medical doctors to ensure that didn’t happen.

The decent thing for this president to do now is stop using the United States Army for props and political gain and stay out of the way during the army’s big birthday.  Saturday belongs to the United States Army and the men and women who wore the army uniform and their families, not to Donald Trump who avoided the call to duty when his draft board and Selective Service called in 1968.

You cannot have it both ways, Mr. President.

Aubrey Sarvis

United States Army veteran

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Archives, Opinion

Character Rot: Sounding the Alarm by Johnny O’Brien

May 15, 2025 by Opinion 6 Comments

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Most of us are aware of the damage Donald Trump is doing to government service, freedom of expression, our universities, and democracy. And the moral decay our “national role model” is inflicting upon America with his daily lying, greed, spite, and vindictiveness.

But most of us are less aware of the grave threat Trump and his spineless minions represent to our precious children, just by broadcasting his malignant narcissism every day. It is not too early to sound the alarm.

For starters, just picture our vulnerable teens bombarded by their commander-in-chief, who rules as a greedy, lawless king—where kindness, honesty, humility, and cooperation are for “suckers and losers.” Our kids, with their online tools and savvy, know this. They see and hear it every day. The most powerful leader in the world (their “leader”) is trashing the most sacred values that have defined America since its founding.

And to what effect on our coming-of-age children? At a minimum, confusion about what behavior or character counts. More frequently, they embrace the loss of moral guardrails and behave (as in Golding’s Lord of the Flies) any way they want.

This is not a theory. I first saw it recently at a boarding school for needy children I once led. It has over 2,000 students and prides itself on building character. Just four months into Trump’s leadership model, more students are flouting rules and debasing their school’s Sacred Values.

When challenged, responses include:

  • “Why should I be kind to a weak classmate?”

  • “Why do I need to tell the truth?”

  • “Why should I share credit with a teammate?”

The school’s Sacred Values—like Integrity and Mutual Trust—are being routinely tested.

Note: These behaviors seem to be more manifest in boys, who are more likely to challenge norms and authority (and who already have excessive learning difficulties these days). And, BTW, where were these teens during Trump’s first term? In late elementary and early middle school, where early character formation is founded.

What fate, then, for our children and their character? What is the future for the sacred values of our critical institutions?

Awareness of a real and present danger is always the first step to combating a serious threat. “This too will pass” is not a sufficient response to 8–12 years of socially induced character decay.

Such a grave challenge will fall first to our parents… and then to our teachers and coaches, who influence behavior the most. And then to our community, church, and political leaders—who, when organized, can effectively resist the moral decay.

But also to each of us who care about America’s character and the moral fiber of our children—those of us who still value kindness, honesty, and the greater common good, and do not want our young folks to become the “Greedy Me Generation.”

Johnny O’Brien is a former president of the Milton Hershey School and its first alumnus to lead the institution. Orphaned at a young age, he was raised at the school and graduated in 1961 before earning a degree from Princeton University and pursuing graduate studies at Johns Hopkins. O’Brien later founded Renaissance Leadership, a firm that coached executives at major corporations. In 2003, he returned to Hershey as its president. He is also the author of Semisweet: An Orphan’s Journey Through the School the Hersheys Built, and currently lives in Easton.

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Filed Under: Opinion

Op-Ed: Anything Goes, but Pete Hegseth May Go First By Aubrey Sarvis

April 26, 2025 by Spy Desk 5 Comments

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Springtime in Trump’s Washington is a mad, mad, mad world, one without humor, subtlety, or joy.  Washington is now a dangerous and chaotic place to work and live. Just ask the senator from Alaska, Lisa Murkowski, who has been among the few Republican senators with the courage to respectfully disagree with President Trump and vote against him when she believed he was wrong.

The Alaska Daily News first reported that while speaking in Anchorage this week Senator Murkowski told a startled audience, “We are all afraid.” The context involved her colleagues in the U. S. Senate and the President of the United States.  After a few moments of silence and reflection, the senator elaborated, “It’s quite a statement.  But we are in a time and a place where I have not been here before. I’ll tell you, I’m oftentimes very anxious myself about using my voice, because retaliation is real.  And that’s not fair.”

In a few words, the senator went to the crux of what is happening in our nation’s capital and none of it is flattering to our unstable president, nor to many of Murkowski’s spineless senate colleagues.

Most of the madness and chaos and fear of the last 100 days began with and remains with our fickle president who flips and flops and is incapable of being honest and trusting the American people with the truth.  I fear the president cannot trust himself with painful truths, something as elementary and factual as the Electoral College results of the Biden-Trump 2020 election.

Long before Donald Trump’s 2020 defeat and brazen scheme to remain in office, lying was the essence of Donald Trump’s character. Lying remains a cornerstone of how he manages, controls, and manipulates. President Trump admits he operates pretty much by instinct, acknowledging there is no overarching comprehensive plan in place. How he runs our country of 340 million people is mostly by the seat of his pants, and much of it is raw, offensive, often vulgar, and invariably presented as factual on social media.

So of course, lying and vulgarity are now part and parcel of business throughout Trump world, especially among those who serve at his beck and call or are out to curry favor with our transactional president.  No surprise that among the first causalities in this Trump White House are truth and integrity.

Lies and liars consume a great deal of attention and time.  Working for a serial liar is demanding, demeaning, and exhausting.  Constantly the handmaidens show the needy boss how much they believe in his enterprise. Shamelessly some throw in “genius” and, “Wow, Mr. President!” This is about performance, demonstrating fierce loyalty.  These toadies were not hired for their credentials, high IQs, or remarkable achievements.  No Lincoln or Roosevelt team of rivals here.

You can catch several of them performing in the president’s staged press conferences in the ostentatious, redecorated gilded oval office. There, the not so esteemed and clueless Attorney General Pam Bondi on cue ignores the subject of due process, a man’s right to be heard in court before he is deported.  Instead, Attorney General Bondi glibly asserts the United States is powerless to facilitate an imprisoned Maryland man’s return to the United States.  The mighty United States and our all-powerful president cannot spring a man from a flea bag prison in a third-rate country. Really?  Need more? Watch Stephen Miller, the president’s deputy chief of staff, tell a whopper regarding Supreme Court language refusing to lift a lower court’s order directing the Administration to ‘facilitate” the return of a Maryland man jailed in El Salvador so he can be heard in a United States court.  Rushing in to foolishly play lawyer, non-lawyer Miller declared a White House legal setback was in fact a victory for the president.  Some victory, when the highest court in the land agrees with the lower court directing the White House to comply forthwith.

Trump itches for an immigration court showdown, lying and stalling to deflect and focus on “immigration” rather than his disastrous and costly on and off again tariff fights against most of the world that has cost American trillions of dollars in just a few weeks. Of course, Trump would prefer a noble fight between a dangerous immigrant and a heroic president battling the courts and overeducated liberal judges to keep America safe from a notorious gang member who robs our good men and does unspeakable bad things to our fine women.

The president picked this cabinet. This is his best and brightest.  Unfortunately, they are also the folks who will guide and advise him when we face the next military threat to our security and well-being. They will be front and center managing any Russian-Iran-Chinese nuclear crisis.

The president’s favorite in his cabinet is the smug Pete Hegseth who has been tap dancing since he was nominated for and became Secretary of Defense, a critically important post for which Mr. Hegseth is uniquely unqualified for by intellect, temperament, experience, and judgement.  Beware of the “warrior” who promotes his patriotism, bravery, and brand on and in the clothes he wears.  The Hegseth wardrobe includes a bright stylized U. S. flag handkerchief, folded inside his front jacket pocket; a U.S. flag stitched on his socks, and the colors of our flag for the inside lining of his tightly tailored suit jacket. This is the same preening defense secretary who, according to The Washington Post, recently ordered a make-up studio near his office in the Pentagon be upgraded for his many TV appearances, but the secretary’s aides were quick to insist he does his own make-up.  On that, I believe him. I suspect Mr. Hegseth does his make-up very well; he has had years of practice.

However, I do not believe Mr. Hegseth when he repeatedly lies and denies he put classified information about an upcoming dangerous military operation on the commercial Signal chat platform. We already know from whom and where Hegseth received that Yemen intelligence about Houthi targets.  We know the reckless secretary’s actions could have put service members under him in harm’s way.

This is not just another Hegseth “rookie” mistake. He is now the leader of the most powerful military in the world, and he is exercising the judgement of a whining junior officer.  I fear the entitled Hegseth expects a waiver from any rule or regulation that gets in his way or his priorities.  This Signal Gate began with Hegseth determined to get around a Pentagon prohibition on cell phone use in his area of the building, a prohibition deemed necessary to protect our security and nation’s secrets.

Secretary Hegseth who served twenty-years of duty retired a major.  When asked about that rank, Hegseth pointed to generals who didn’t know how to fight and lead in war, and Pentagon lawyers in air-condition offices who wouldn’t let him shine in combat for his not attainting a much higher rank.  He played the victim card, blaming others, just as he is doing today, fingering his hand-picked aides and MAGA appointees in the Pentagon out to get him.

Secretary Hegseth fails to grasp that a warrior’s responsibility is to protect the men and women who serve under his command, not use them as props to show off before friends and family on a commercial chat platform. An investigation has been requested by the Senate Armed Services Committee.  If it is a thorough investigation, Mr. Hegseth’s lying, and conduct will be exposed and neither President Trump nor his Defense Secretary will be able to withstand the heat. Mr. Hegseth will have to go.

Secretary Hegseth serves under a reckless president who craves attention and blames others. They have a lot in common.  In a passage from F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby one might easily substitute the president and the secretary for Tom and Daisy:

They were careless people, Tom and

Daisy – they smashed up things and

creatures and then retreated into

their money or their vast carelessness

or whatever it was that kept them

together, and let other people clean up

the mess they had made.

 

Aubrey Sarvis is an Army veteran and retired lawyer.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Op-Ed, Op-Ed, Opinion

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