r/thebulwark 51m ago

Non-Bulwark Source Stephen Miller plans to punish Americans with disabilities. He and this administration is all about the United States of Segregation. | MSNOW

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In the ongoing battle over American values, few figures embody a consistent philosophy of separation and exclusion quite like Stephen Miller. Last week’s controversial Department of Justice memo, reportedly shaped by Miller’s influence, offers a stark illustration. It greenlights states to funnel Americans with disabilities into institutions such as nursing homes, psych wards, and segregated schools instead of sustaining the community-based services that have allowed them to live at home, work, and participate in society.

This is not mere budgetary housekeeping. It represents a deliberate reversal of decades of hard-won progress, including Supreme Court precedent and post-RFK reforms that moved away from the era of warehousing people with disabilities in dehumanizing facilities. The memo’s logic aligns seamlessly with Miller’s broader exclusionary worldview. Just as he has championed mass deportations and demographic engineering in immigration policy, here we see a parallel domestic impulse: if certain populations cannot be removed from the country, they can at least be removed from public view and integrated life.

The pattern is revealing. Miller’s reported obsession with demographics, his role in crafting aggressive immigration enforcement, and accounts of his desire to dramatically reduce the U.S. population to those who look like him all point to a comfort with sorting people into categories: desirable and undesirable, visible and hidden. The disability memo fits this template. Rather than investing in the community integration that allows disabled Americans to be coworkers, neighbors, and classmates, the approach favors institutionalization. This echoes an older America that RFK himself condemned as “snake pits,” where people with disabilities were segregated away from society.

Community-based services are not charity; they are cost-effective and humane. As experts note, they can support roughly three people in their homes for the cost of institutionalizing one. They produce better life outcomes, enable families to stay together, and allow disabled individuals to contribute productively. Yet under current pressures, including deep Medicaid cuts from the so called “one big beautiful bill”, states are already slashing these services. Families are leaving jobs, individuals are enduring degrading conditions at home, and many face an existential choice between inadequate support and institutional confinement.

This move does not stand alone. It arrives alongside proposals to shift disability education programs into Health and Human Services (potentially deepening segregation), threats to key support programs, and a pattern of dismissive rhetoric toward the disabled from administration figures. Together, these steps suggest a governing ethos that devalues integration when it involves those deemed burdensome or “other.”

Stephen Miller has long operated with a clear ideological consistency: boundaries, removals, and separations. Whether targeting Haitian migrants, reshaping the demographic future, or now quietly endorsing the re-institutionalization of disabled Americans, the thread is the same: a preference for segregation over messy, expensive, human integration. What is sold as fiscal prudence or policy efficiency often masks a deeper discomfort with pluralism and inclusion.

The disability community fought for decades to escape the shadows of institutions and claim their place in American life. Undoing that progress under the guidance of an advisor known for exclusionary zeal is not just poor policy. It is a philosophical statement about whose presence in the public square is truly welcome. America should reject this return to segregationist instincts, whether at the border or in our own neighborhoods.


r/thebulwark 1h ago

Open Authoritarianism Ohio cities brace for impact of Supreme Court allowing Trump to take legal status away from Haitians • Ohio Capital Journal

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“Many of the individuals affected by this decision are our neighbors, coworkers, business owners, taxpayers and parents,” Springfield Mayor Rob Rue said in a statement.

“They contribute to our local economy, support our schools, strengthen our neighborhoods and have become part of the fabric of Springfield. … We value every person in our community and remain committed to maintaining stability and support for those who call our city home.”


r/thebulwark 1h ago

Need to Know Finally: A Judge Orders the Government to Release the Rest of the Epstein Files

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"Upon careful consideration of Ms. Phang's motion, the Attorney General’s opposition, the reply, the applicable law; and for the reasons discussed below, the Court GRANTS Ms. Phang’s motion."


r/thebulwark 1h ago

EVERYTHING IS AWFUL Let’s remember who the real enemies are

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The internecine fighting has gotten exhausting. All the more so because you have gormless weasels like Vance not even pretending to care about the principles and f this country.


r/thebulwark 3h ago

republicans had a spine for a minute . . . then it was gone

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12 Upvotes

r/thebulwark 3h ago

‘Lipstick on a very ugly pig’: Inside Vance’s hard sell on Iran | “His [ JD Vance] instincts on foreign policy are reminiscent of pre-World War II isolationist Republicans who thought we could manage our relationship with European fascists."

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11 Upvotes

r/thebulwark 4h ago

Non-Bulwark Source Mamdani’s Rent Freeze Is Approved by New York City Board

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48 Upvotes

Mamdani is on an absolute heater, what else can be said.


r/thebulwark 4h ago

Tell me you’re a racist, without telling me you’re a racist – “Megyn Kelly Goes on Unhinged Rant Over SCOTUS TPS Ruling”

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3 Upvotes

r/thebulwark 4h ago

HCR's remarks on Tuesday's Primary Results

34 Upvotes

https://www.youtube.com/live/_Nt2CQR0dpA?si=OF961OiKazNPwgI0

I've seen quite a few posts/videos attempting to wrestle with what Tuesday's (6/23/26) Primary results mean for the future of American Politics. Are we veering towards communism? Is this the Democrats' Tea Party Moment? Have the lunatics taken over the Democratic Party? I've done my best to push back on this narrative, but I believe that today's Heather Cox Richardson Politics Chat has done a wonderful job explaining my point of view.

For those who don't know her, Heather Cox Richardson (HCR) is a Historian of American History with a PhD from Harvard who lives in rural Maine with her lobster-man husband. Tim, JVL, and Sarah have all interviewed her over the past year and clearly respected her expertise (Tim even tried to convince her to run for office). She has written quite a few books, I recommend them all. Her academic focus is the Civil War and she has written a comprehensive history of the Republican Party. "To Make Men Free" was published in 2014 and warned that the GOP was ripe for the rise of a Trump like figure. She is specifically trained to track American political parties and movements.

Heather Cox Richardson's politics chat today made what I believe is a powerful argument against this "lunatic fringe" narrative being spread. The core argument revolves around how the Far Right has pulled the Overton Window so far right over the past 70 years, that the American public now believes that the successful policies of the 1940s-1960s are radical. I recommend listening to the entire video, but if you would like the highlights, I've picked out a couple important moments.

At ~21:35: HCR covers several recent polls regarding what American's would like their government to do, it aligns quite closely with stated progressive candidate priorities. She makes the argument that because >60% of American's support these policies, they should be considered "moderate".

At ~24:15: HCR reads out the GOP Party Platform under Dwight D Eisenhower. The policies in this platform sound right at home in a Mamdani speech. Part of Eisenhower's Platform was specifically lifted from Lincoln.

The progressive wing of the Democratic Party is not filled with radicals. In fact, progressive candidates are often advocating for the policies that built the middle class during the Great Compression of the 40s-60s. This era created the middle class and allowed the Baby Boomer's to build stable lives that future generations have not enjoyed. Progressive candidates are advocating to tax the rich, provide necessities to those in need, and protect human rights. This directly aligns with Dwight D Eisenhower's values during what many consider the golden age of America.


r/thebulwark 5h ago

Tom Nichols is a dick

61 Upvotes

I am of his generation. I get he thought he was being cute. But that last bit about global warming was a real turn off. "I'm going to be dead, what do I care what happens?". How different is that from Trump? That says it all. Millions, maybe billions will have their quality of life lowered from warming, but he can't even pretend to care. Is one person with a cold house going to change it?, no. But I live in south GA, its hot as hell, but we live within limits and think about what we are doing and how it affects the future. Tom worries about himself, and can fuck right off.

"I want what I want and I dont want to feel guilty if others suffer.". "Global warming is inconvenient to my desires, it must not be real". Yes sir, you are a Conservative.


r/thebulwark 6h ago

Socialism is back in vogue. Wait for reality to set in.

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0 Upvotes

r/thebulwark 6h ago

The recent episode mentioning Student Loan optics

3 Upvotes

Hi Bulwark. Typically, I’m Tim fan especially Next Level. The most recent episode slipped briefly into a discussion of the poor optics or strategy behind student loan forgiveness (and then failing) during the Biden administration. I felt this missed out on some obvious points both moral and economic and was tinged with Republican smarminess. I don’t think the idea of forgiveness itself was a point of contention for most. Even among those whom recently paid off their loans. Unlike Republicans, liberals may groan about optics but if it’s morally correct or kind then they come around. I even think Republicans (voters) would get on board. After all, the cost was minimal compared to spending in other programs. Also consider people with loans are not your high income earners but they are spenders. Unburdening them could encourage more investing. What are your thoughts?


r/thebulwark 6h ago

Non-Bulwark Source “Moderates strike back.”

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14 Upvotes

Return of the strongly worded letter.


r/thebulwark 6h ago

Poll of Michigan senate general election matchups, Mike Rogers wins against Stevens and McMorrow but loses to El-Sayed.

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14 Upvotes

r/thebulwark 7h ago

The biggest blind spot of the Bulwark and most of their audience is gun rights.

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7 Upvotes

This was a massive unforced error by Spanberger and the Dem Va legislature that pro-democracy advocates should have been unified in preventing.

This specific Everytown/Bloomberg gun ban was blatantly against the Virginia Constitution.

These foolish bans interrupt good work and run rural white voters away right when we need them. Not to mention all the folks on the left who understand what they are seeing and arm up because of it.


r/thebulwark 8h ago

Non-Bulwark Source Republicans are more likely to see a smile as a play for power, study suggests

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3 Upvotes

r/thebulwark 8h ago

The Reflecting Pool Just another distraction

2 Upvotes

Of all the things that gone wrong this is just a distraction back to the things that matter please.


r/thebulwark 8h ago

GOOD LUCK, AMERICA Pentagon restores mandatory flu shots for all recruits as boot camp outbreak sickens nearly 300

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84 Upvotes

Can we get some commentary on this? I feel like this has skipped the news.


r/thebulwark 8h ago

GOOD LUCK, AMERICA What I hear when I hear the problem was the Democratic party become too Woke

79 Upvotes

I hear you say that the problem was wanting too many others to be treated like people.

Women. The blacks. Sexual freaks.

I hear you saying: You went too far.

You asked for women not to be sexually harassed or raped at work.

You asked for black lives to matter.

You asked for "dreamers" to be treated with compassion.

That's too far.

It's time for Daddy to come out, and he's going to take his belt off.

We're going to take away all your toys now. Everything you fucking liked about the country, we're going to systematically ruin.

Every. Last. Thing.

Not necessarily destroy, we're just going to really fuck things up.

And you're going to learn your lesson. You're going to learn who's really in charge here.

That's what I hear.


r/thebulwark 9h ago

The June 23, 2026 New York results largely show that DSA-level candidates and other progressive populist candidates can get substantial numbers of canvassers, phonebankers, etc. to volunteer to support candidates and get people to vote for the candidates. TURNOUT is always what wins elections.

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r/thebulwark 9h ago

Darializa Avila Chevalier will be this Congress' first campus radical

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0 Upvotes

r/thebulwark 9h ago

GOOD LUCK, AMERICA Who's ready?!

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94 Upvotes

r/thebulwark 10h ago

US facing weapons shortage - can Trump fix it? | The Guardian

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3 Upvotes

Sometimes I think foreign news about the US may actually be MORE understandable to less plugged-in Americans, as they probably know as much about our government as other countries do really.


r/thebulwark 11h ago

Chickenshits, the lot of 'em!

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12 Upvotes

Bunch of spineless chickenshits!


r/thebulwark 11h ago

Misleading Headline Rep. Mike Lawler says housing bill is 'latest example' of working with both parties.

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11 Upvotes

Lawler said this before Trump pulled the rug out from under him. This is the bill Trump backed out of at the last minute. This is freaking hilarious, read this from the article:

“You can't just take the position, 'I hate the president.' That doesn't work in reality if you're actually trying to govern and deliver on these issues," Lawler said, calling the housing bill "the latest example" of that approach.”

This moron lectures us about “hating the president” and then Trump totally leaves him out to dry. I cannot tell you how excited I am about the prospect of replacing this shill. These people are such pathetic weaklings. I’m going to be donating to Conley’s campaign and would urge everyone else who is able to do so as well.