The public is becoming desensitized to government behaviors, such as ICE's excessive force, that should be universally unacceptable. This "new normal" creates a dangerous precedent where nonpartisan revulsion is replaced by partisan justification, eroding democratic standards for everyone.

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History’s most shocking atrocities are defined less by their authoritarian leaders and more by the 'giant blob of enablers' who facilitate them. The current political climate demonstrates this, where professionals and politicians abdicate their expertise and principles to avoid conflict, becoming complicit in the process and allowing destructive ideologies to gain power.

A significant ideological inconsistency exists where political figures on the right fiercely condemn perceived federal overreach like the "Twitter files"—requests to remove content—while simultaneously defending aggressive, violent federal actions by agencies like ICE. This reveals a partisan, rather than principled, opposition to government power.

The public focus of ICE is immigration, but its aggressive tactics and fascist-style imagery are primarily designed to intimidate American citizens. The goal is to cow the broader population into submission and discourage them from standing up to state power, transforming the agency into a tool of domestic political control.

Much of government functions on decorum and unwritten rules. When political actors attack these norms—like challenging procedural traditions—it creates a cycle of retribution that destabilizes the entire system more profoundly than any single illegal act could.

Even citizens who support a policy's goal, like immigration enforcement, can be alienated by the methods. The image of masked, unaccountable agents taps into a fundamental, cross-partisan American cultural fear of tyranny, overriding specific policy alignment.

The expansion of executive power and erosion of political norms, such as state intervention in corporate decisions or attacks on media, will not be reversed. Future administrations, regardless of party, are unlikely to relinquish these new powers. A Democrat could use state capitalism to promote renewables just as a Republican uses it for oil.

The current level of hyper-partisanship is not a recent phenomenon but the culmination of a continuous, 40-year decline in public trust across all major institutions, including government, media, and church. Trust was significantly higher even during past national traumas like the assassinations of the 1960s and Watergate.

Despite major political scandals, much of the public remains unalarmed because their daily routines feel unchanged. The abstract nature of high-level corruption fails to register as an immediate threat when life seems normal, preventing a collective sense of shock or awakening.

The fatal ICE shooting in Minnesota is a symptom of extreme political division. People now view federal agencies as illegitimate, leading them to resist actions they disagree with, escalating situations to a level resembling civil conflict.

When moderate leaders respond to radical actions with tepid statements instead of decisive opposition, they grant tacit approval. Their lack of a strong reaction acts as a "weather vane for normies," signaling to average citizens that the behavior is acceptable.