Let’s Call It What It Is
When Marines are being rolled into a major U.S. city to suppress domestic dissent—and it’s not the lead story on every screen? That’s not just alarming. That’s pre-collapse behavior.
700 Marines are being deployed to Los Angeles. Quietly. Casually. No wall-to-wall coverage. No primetime press conference. Just a late-stage empire slipping troops into the city like it’s no big deal.
This is the normalization of militarized fear.
This is what it looks like when the line between domestic policing and wartime posture evaporates.
And if you’re like me—trans, disabled, poor, and politically awake—then you’re not shocked. You’re vibrating. You’re trying to figure out where to go, who to trust, how much longer you can hold still.
Because we’ve seen this story before.
History doesn’t whisper anymore—it shouts.
And this? This is the part where the powerful get nervous, and the vulnerable get crushed.
What Do You Do When You See the Writing on the Wall?
You don’t wait for it to be trending.
You don’t wait for CNN to give you permission to be terrified.
You get ready.
You stay sharp.
You move—when you can, how you can, even if it’s messy and slow.
Because this isn’t about fearmongering.
It’s about calling it what it is—before it swallows us whole.




I am confident that when I win the 2028 election, I will have to organize a hostile takeover that puts Jan 6 to shame. Because I am confident the measures he is taking to protect the white house are meant to keep rioting from reaching him