Michiganders Vow to Fight Trump Attacks on LGBTQ+ Youth as DOJ Probes Public Schools

Spread the love

Original article by Jessica Corbett republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).

People participate in a “Hands Off” protest against the Trump administration in Detroit, Michigan, on April 5, 2025. (Photo by Jim West/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

“We urge federal officials to focus on real threats to student well-being like gun violence, funding cuts, and staffing shortages rather than singling out districts that work to support all children,” said one advocacy leader.

Denouncing the Trump administration’s probes to determine whether three public school districts “have included sexual orientation and gender ideology” content in courses as “part of a broader attack on our rights as Michiganders,” the head of one progressive group pledged Friday to keep fighting to ensure that “all of our kids can thrive at school free from bullying, harassment, and other unfair treatment.”

The US Department of Justice announced Wednesday that its Civil Rights Division is investigating Detroit Public Schools Community District, Godfrey-Lee Public Schools, and the Lansing School District. The DOJ is examining content for pre-K through 12th grade courses, opt-out policies, and whether the districts “limit access to single-sex intimate spaces, such as bathrooms and locker rooms, based on biological sex.”

RECOMMENDED…

Children held signs as protesters marched in Minneapolis against Immigration and Customs Enforcement

From Business Closures to Student Walkouts, Communities Across US Demand: ‘ICE Out!’

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz And MN Attorney General Ellison Hold News Conference On Federal Detention Of Children

Minnesota Districts and Teachers Sue to Make ICE ‘Stay Away From Our Schools’

In a Friday statement, Justin Mendoza, executive director of Progress Michigan, emphasized that his state’s “civil rights laws explicitly protect LGBTQ+ students, and our state must enforce them to the fullest extent.”

Mendoza condemned not only the Trump administration’s efforts to harm “the most vulnerable and historically marginalized among us,” but also Republicans at the state and federal level who “are trying to limit honest conversations about our nation’s history, while fighting each and every attempt to create safe, inclusive schools for our children.”

“Attorney General Pam Bondi is setting a terrible example for younger generations—considering the way she behaved at a recent congressional hearing where she name-called members of Congress—and now she’s going a step further by throwing nondiscrimination policies into the dumpster,” he said. “People of all genders, races, and backgrounds benefit from strong nondiscrimination policies.”

“From Marquette to Monroe, teachers, students, and their families are committed to having an educational system that reflects the diversity of the world they live in,” Mendoza continued. “Classrooms deserve to have age-appropriate conversations about health, identity, and respect, and if parents choose to opt their children out of participating in these conversations, they are already allowed to by Michigan law.”

“The Trump Department of Justice is truly looking to invent problems instead of actually fighting crime and violence towards youth,” he concluded, “and Michiganders won’t take this intrusion into our education system.”

“The Trump Department of Justice is truly looking to invent problems instead of actually fighting crime and violence towards youth, and Michiganders won’t take this intrusion into our education system.”

Other state and nationwide groups have also spoken out against the administration’s probes and targeting of LGBTQ+ youth this week. Brian Dittmeier, director of LGBTQI+ equality at the National Women’s Law Center, blasted the investigations as a “blatant attempt to discourage inclusive education.”

Jay Kaplan, a staff attorney for the ACLU of Michigan, told Chalkbeat that “this is an attempt to harass and bully districts into discriminating against trans kids and into erasing the existence of LGBTQ people.”

Equality Michigan executive director Erin Knott said that “LGBTQ+ youth are among the most vulnerable young people in our state. They face higher rates of bullying, harassment, and mental health challenges. Inclusive education policies are not ‘ideology,’ they are evidence-based efforts to ensure that every student feels safe, respected, and seen in their own school community.”

“All kids deserve an education that reflects the diversity of the world they live in,” she stressed. “Age-appropriate discussions about health, identity, and respect help create safer classrooms for all students. We urge federal officials to focus on real threats to student well-being like gun violence, funding cuts, and staffing shortages rather than singling out districts that work to support all children.”

State Superintendent Glenn Maleyko was similarly critical of the federal administration in his response, saying Thursday that “the Michigan Department of Education strongly supports all students and supports the school districts that have been targeted by the US Department of Justice.”

Maleyko continued:

If we want to put Students First and make sure children can learn, we need all students to be healthy and safe and feel included. The much-needed updates to health education guidelines—which the Department of Justice falsely said are state requirements—help local districts make decisions on how they can support student health.

As required by state law, MCL 380.1507, local school boards set health curriculum with input from local sex education advisory boards. Local control remains in place. Parents retain the right to decide whether their children should participate in sex education instruction.

The Michigan Department of Education strongly supports and will work closely with the three districts’ efforts to select a curriculum that best supports the needs of their students, consistent with state standards and guidelines. We remain committed to protecting the rights of all students and to upholding Michigan’s constitutional guarantee of access to a free public education for every child.

“The breadth and scope of the federal requests, premised on a mischaracterization of the Michigan Health Education Standards Guidelines adopted by the State Board of Education, place a significant administrative burden on local districts and risk diverting time and resources away from the core mission of educating students,” Maleyko added.

As for the targeted districts, a spokesperson for the Detroit schools declined to comment, while Guillermo Lopez, the Lansing school board president, told the Detroit Free Press that parents in his district are informed that “they can opt out of certain classes.”

Arnetta Thompson, superintendent of Godfrey-Lee schools, told Chalkbeat that her district will provide information requested by the DOJ and “is not facing any charges or findings of wrongdoing. We remain committed to complying with all applicable federal, state, and local laws and have consistently operated in accordance with those laws.”

Original article by Jessica Corbett republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).

Donald Trump decrees forbidden terms denying sexual diversity
Donald Trump decrees forbidden terms denying sexual diversity
Elon Musk urges you to be a Fascist like him, says that you can ignore facts and reality then.
Elon Musk urges you to be a Fascist like him, says that you can ignore facts and reality then.
Orcas discuss Donald Trump and the killer apes' concept of democracy. Front Orca warns that Trump is crashing his country's economy and that everything he does he does for the fantastically wealthy.
Orcas discuss Donald Trump and the killer apes’ concept of democracy. Front Orca warns that Trump is crashing his country’s economy and that everything he does he does for the fantastically wealthy.

Continue ReadingMichiganders Vow to Fight Trump Attacks on LGBTQ+ Youth as DOJ Probes Public Schools

Trump DOJ Fires Jan. 6 Prosecutors, Top FBI Agents While Threatening Larger Purge

Spread the love

Original article by Olivia Rosane republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).

The Federal Bureau of Investigation Field Office building in Washington D.C., United States of America is shown on July 12, 2024. (Photo: Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

“Trump’s outrageous attack on the DOJ and FBI is a clear and present danger to public safety, and a wrecking ball swinging at the rule of law,” Rep. Jamie Raskin said.

The Trump Department of Justice made moves on Friday to fire FBI employees and prosecutors who were involved with the government’s cases against U.S. President Donald Trump and the participants in the January 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

First, on Thursday, several senior FBI officials—stationed both at headquarters and in the field—were told to either resign or be fired. Then, at 5 pm Eastern Time on Friday, dozens of DOJ prosecutors who worked on January 6 cases received an email saying they had been fired. Also on Friday, an email sent to FBI employees told them that acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove, who previously represented Trump in the cases against him, had requested a list of everyone who had worked on January 6 cases “to determine whether any additional personnel actions are necessary.”

“Firing the FBI agents who investigated violent attacks against police officers on January 6 would set a dangerous precedent and make all of us less safe,” Stand Up America executive director Christina Harvey said in a statement. “This is a shameless act of political retribution that weakens federal law enforcement and the rule of law.”

“This is a massacre meant to chill our efforts to fight crime without fear or favor.”

The FBI higher-ups forced out included the agency’s six most senior executives as well as more than 20 directors of field offices including Washington, D.C., Miami, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, New Orleans, Seattle, and Las Vegas. The targeted officials had been promoted by former FBI Director Christopher Wray, according to The New York Times. The Washington, D.C. field office worked extensively on Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigations into Trump’s mishandling of classified documents and involvement in the January 6 insurrection, as well as the investigations of the rioters themselves, NBC News reported. One source told The Hill that agents who had worked on the cases were physically escorted out of the D.C. field office on Friday.

NBC reported that several of the senior officials had chosen to retire, even though they could have challenged their dismissals as nonpolitical appointees subject to civil service regulations.

Many of the agents received the ultimatum the same day that U.S. President Donald Trump’s nominee to head the FBI, Kash Patel, promised in his Senate confirmation hearing that he would not retaliate against any agents who worked on the Trump cases and was not aware of any attempts to do so.

“All FBI employees will be protected against political retribution,” Patel told the Senate.

Trump, meanwhile, said on Friday that he was not aware of the firings, but added, “If they fired some people over there, that’s a good thing, because they were very bad. They were very corrupt people, very corrupt, and they hurt our country very badly with the weaponization.”

Another memo sent by Bove to acting FBI Director Brian J. Driscoll Jr. laid the groundwork for more firings, as Driscoll was asked to submit a list of all agents and employees “assigned at any time to investigations and/or prosecutions” related to January 6, as The New York Times reported. Field offices received a similar request from the FBI’s counterterrorism division. Bove also asked for a list of agents who worked on a case against Hamas leadership, though it is not clear why.

One employee told CNN that the January 6 case was the largest case the bureau had ever worked on, observing that “everyone touched that case.”

In an email to staff on Friday reported by NBC, Driscoll noted, “We understand that this request encompasses thousands of employees across the country who have supported these investigative efforts,” adding, “I am one of those employees.”

“This is a massacre meant to chill our efforts to fight crime without fear or favor,” another anonymous agent told CNN. “Even for those not fired, it sends the message that the bureau is no longer independent.”

The FBI Agents Association, which represents over 14,000 active and former agents, issued a scathing statement on Friday.

“If true, these outrageous actions by acting officials are fundamentally at odds with the law enforcement objectives outlined by President Trump and his support for FBI Agents,” the association said. “Dismissing potentially hundreds of agents would severely weaken the bureau’s ability to protect the country from national security and criminal threats and will ultimately risk setting up the bureau and its new leadership for failure. These actions also contradict the commitments that Attorney General-nominee Pam Bondi and Director-nominee Kash Patel made during their nomination hearings before the United States Senate.”

The group added that Patel had promised association members in a meeting that “agents would be afforded appropriate process and review and not face retribution based solely on the cases to which they were assigned.”

Finally on Friday, DOJ prosecutors received an email from Interim U.S. Attorney Ed Martin, telling them they were being fired and including a memo from Bove. The fired prosecutors had been hired to work on the January 6 cases and were made permanent by the Biden administration following the November election. In his memo, Bove suggested the prosecutors had been made permanent in an inappropriate attempt to protect them from being fired.

“I will not tolerate subversive personnel actions by the previous administration at any U.S. Attorney’s Office,” Bove wrote, as POLITICO reported. “Too much is at stake. In light of the foregoing, the appropriate course is to terminate these employees.”

One of the impacted prosecutors told POLITICO that 25 to 30 people were let go.

“This attack on the Justice Department and particularly on the FBI is the beginning of America’s first true era of dictatorship.”

The latest round of DOJ firings comes days after the Trump administration already fired a dozen lawyers who had helped bring Smith’s two cases against Trump. They also come a week after Trump’s firing of 12 inspectors general. Trump also pardoned all approximately 1,500 people involved in the January 6 insurrection on his first day in office.

News of the FBI and DOJ firings sparked ire from Democratic lawmakers.

“Trump’s outrageous attack on the DOJ and FBI is a clear and present danger to public safety, and a wrecking ball swinging at the rule of law,” said Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), ranking member of the House Committee on the Judiciary, in a statement. “Trump wants to send the message to the police and federal officers that the law doesn’t apply to Trump and his enablers. It’s also part of his campaign to replace nonpartisan career civil servants with political loyalists and incompetent sycophants. Trump’s moves have already left the Justice Department and the FBI rudderless and adrift by ousting their career senior ranks. Now, these unprecedented purges of hundreds of prosecutors, staff, and experienced law enforcement agents will undermine the government’s power to protect our country against national security, cyber, and criminal threats.”

“The loyal friend of autocrats, kleptocrats, oligarchs, and broligarchs, Trump doesn’t care about the requirements of democracy, national security, and public safety,” Raskin continued. “His agenda is vengeance and retribution. If allowed to proceed, Trump’s purge of our federal law enforcement workforce will expose America to authoritarianism and dictatorship.”

Sen. Dick Durbin, (D-Ill.), who serves on the Judiciary Committee, called the firings “a major blow to the FBI and Justice Department’s integrity and effectiveness.”

“This is a brazen assault on the rule of law that also severely undermines our national security and public safety,” Durbin continued. “Unelected Trump lackeys are carrying out widespread political retribution against our nation’s career law enforcement officials. President Trump would rather have the FBI and DOJ full of blind admirers and loyalists than experienced law enforcement officers.”

Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.) also decried the firings and cast doubt on the integrity of Bondi and Patel, whom Trump had tapped to lead the DOJ and FBI respectively.

“Pam Bondi and Kash Patel both committed to protecting the Department of Justice and the FBI from politics and weaponization. If these reports are true, it’s clear they misled the Senate,” Himes said. “As ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, I have repeatedly asked the FBI for more information about these reports and will insist on answers.”

Fellow Connecticut Democrat Rep. Rosa DeLauro wrote on social media: “Priority #1 for the Trump administration: Protect the lawless and purge those who uphold the law. The firing of FBI agents and federal prosecutors without cause is an assault on the rule of law and law enforcement. It leaves Americans vulnerable and less safe. We will push back.”

As Democrats promised action, Harvey of Stand Up America also called on Republican lawmakers to respond.

“This is not about public safety—it’s about revenge and control,” Harvey said. “Removing experienced law enforcement professionals and replacing them with political loyalists puts all of our safety at risk. If there are any Republican senators left who care about protecting the rule of law and public safety, they should oppose this dangerous purge and reject Kash Patel’s nomination as FBI Director.”

Progressive political commenter Thom Hartmann urged U.S. citizens to call their representatives.

“Let’s just call these mass firings at Justice and the FBI what they areDonald Trump is a lawless man who is ripping apart the FBI to turn it into a banana republic-style group of enforcing thugs who will only do his will,” Hartmann wrote on his Substack Saturday morning. “They will spare his friends and persecute his enemies. We’ve seen this over and over during the past century in countries all over the world; it’s nothing new. It’s just that we never expected to see it here in America.”

“[Russian President Vladimir] Putin dreamed for most of his life of destroying America; he now has a friend who is doing it for him. This attack on the Justice Department and particularly on the FBI is the beginning of America’s first true era of dictatorship. The only question now is how long and how far Democratic and Republican politicians and career government employees will tolerate this, and, when their resistance comes, whether it will be too late. The phone number for Congress is 202-224-3121.”

Original article by Olivia Rosane republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).

Elon Musk urges you to be a Fascist like him, says that you can ignore facts and reality then.
Elon Musk urges you to be a Fascist like him, says that you can ignore facts and reality then.
Continue ReadingTrump DOJ Fires Jan. 6 Prosecutors, Top FBI Agents While Threatening Larger Purge

Congressional Dems Request DOJ Investigation into Big Oil’s Climate Deception

Spread the love

Original article by Dana Drugmand republished from DeSmog.

U.S. Department of Justice in Washington DC. Credit: Scott (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Citing “new evidence” of Big Oil firms’ advanced knowledge of climate risks and their actions to publicly conceal these risks, Democratic members of Congress are renewing calls for the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate carbon majors for potential violations of federal law.

In a letter sent to Attorney General Merrick Garland on Tuesday, the 20 congressional signatories, led by Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) and Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Calif.), compare Big Oil’s deceptive conduct to that of Big Tobacco. In 2006, major tobacco firms were convicted of violating the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act in litigation brought by the DOJ. The letter requests that the DOJ now open an investigation into ExxonMobil, Shell, and other oil majors to “determine whether they violated RICO, consumer protection, truth in advertising, public health, or other laws.”

The call for a federal investigation into the fossil fuel industry’s alleged climate deception follows new revelations further showing that Big Oil knew about the climate consequences of its products, yet actively worked to disseminate climate denial and block policy responses to protect profits.

As DeSmog reported in an investigation published March 31, oil major Shell sponsored climate research in the 1970s — years earlier than previously thought. Despite the stark warnings for society issued in internal reports, the company backed a series of industry publications that downplayed climate risks, emphasized uncertainties in climate science, and called for more fossil fuel use, particularly coal. The investigation was based on more than 200 documents uncovered and compiled by Dutch scholar and activist Vatan Hüzeir.   

One of those documents, an internal 1989 Shell scenarios report, discussed the potential for an unprecedented climate refugee crisis with global temperatures rising considerably beyond 1.5 degrees C (2.7 degrees F). The report warned: “Civilisation [sic] could prove a fragile thing.”

The congressional letter to DOJ cites this and several other Shell documents from the investigation, stating: “Despite these warnings, Shell continued to publicly promote the use of fossil fuels and participate in trade associations and other groups that pushed climate denial and opposed solutions.” As DeSmog’s reporting noted, Shell engaged in lobbying and trade associations in the 1990s and 2000s that did just that, such as the Global Climate Coalition and the American Petroleum Institute.     

The letter also points to two peer-reviewed studies indicating that Big Oil deceived and continues to deceive the public. One, published in January in the journal Science by researchers Geoffrey Supran, Stefan Rahmstorf, and Naomi Oreskes, demonstrated that Exxon’s climate modeling and global warming projections were exceptionally accurate, and explained that despite this skillful scientific understanding, the company’s public statements contradicted its internal knowledge of the climate risk. The other study, by Mei Li, Gregory Trencher, and Jusen Asuka and published in 2022 in the journal PLOS ONE, showed the disconnect between oil majors’ rhetoric and pledges around the low carbon transition and their actual actions and investments that prioritize their fossil fuel business.

“The available evidence that these companies lied — and continue to lie — to the public about their central role in exacerbating the climate crisis demands further investigation,” the letter contends. It alleges that this conduct may “constitute the most consequential deception campaign in history, with potentially existential consequences for our planet.”

Shell and ExxonMobil knew their products fueled the #ClimateCrisis, but lied to the public to protect their profits.

READ: Our bicameral letter, co-led by @SenBlumenthal, urging @TheJusticeDept to investigate whether their actions violated federal law. https://t.co/pg3vP9jPgm— Rep. Ted Lieu (@RepTedLieu) July 25, 2023

The letter comes amidst alarming signals of climate breakdown across the country, from the hot-tub-temperature water off the Florida Keys, to the worst flooding Vermont has seen in nearly a century, to punishing heat in the Southwest sizzling sidewalks and causing severe burn injuries.

The Democratic members of Congress who signed onto the letter along with Sen. Blumenthal and Rep. Lieu include Reps. Katie Porter, Jared Huffman, Mark DeSaulnier, Kevin Mullin, and Nanette Díaz Barragán, all of California; Reps. Kim Schrier and Pramila Jayapal of Washington; Rep. Kathy Castor of Florida; Rep. Rashida Tlaib of Michigan; Rep. Cori Bush of Missouri; and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York. Sens. Ed Markey of Massachusetts, Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, Peter Welch of Vermont, Mazie Hirono of Hawaii, John Fetterman of Pennsylvania, and Alex Padilla of California also signed on.

Just two weeks ago, during an online climate discussion, several members of Congress including Ocasio-Cortez, Whitehouse, and Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, called on the Department of Justice to take legal action against Big Oil, with Sanders suggesting they pay the Attorney General a visit to make their request in person. He and other senators have previously written to the DOJ and President Joe Biden requesting an investigation into the fossil fuel industry’s climate deception.

Richard Wiles, president of the Center for Climate Integrity, which advocates for holding climate polluters accountable, said in an emailed statement that this deception amounts to the most “consequential fraud committed against the American people” ever. 

“Just as they did with the tobacco industry, the Department of Justice must exercise its unique power to hold the fossil fuel industry accountable and stop the lying,” Wiles said. “As long as Big Oil’s climate lies, both past and present, remain unchallenged by the DOJ, protecting the American public from the ravages of climate change will remain that much more difficult.”

Original article by Dana Drugmand republished from DeSmog.

Continue ReadingCongressional Dems Request DOJ Investigation into Big Oil’s Climate Deception