EgbertoWillies.com

Political involvement should be a requirement for citizenship

  • Home
    • Homepage
    • Login
    • About Us
    • Bio
    • Research
      • BallotPedia
      • Bureau of Labor Statistics
      • CallMyCongress
      • LegiScan
      • OpenSecrets.org
      • Texas Legislature Online
      • US Dept; Of Health & Human Services
      • US Dept. of Labor
      • VoteSmart
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
  • Shows
    • Live TV
    • Move to Amend Reports
    • Politics Done Right
  • Books
  • Articles
    • AlterNet
    • CNN iReports
    • CommonDreams
    • DailyKos
    • Medium
    • OpEdNews
    • Substack
  • Activism
    • Battleground Texas
    • Coffee Party
    • Move To Amend
    • OccupyMovement
  • Social
    • BlueSky
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Tumblr
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
  • Sections
    • Environment
    • Food And Cooking
    • Health
    • Local News
    • Odd News
    • People Making A Difference
    • Political
    • Reviews
      • Book Reviews
      • Books I Recommend
      • Product Reviews
    • Sports
    • Substack Notes
  • Donate
  • Store

Focus on the Big Beautiful Bill. The Trump-Musk feud, travel ban, Harvard, etc. are distractions.

June 5, 2025 By Egberto Willies Leave a Comment

Sorry, there was a YouTube error.

Trump is willing to flood the zone with anything—even blows that seem self-inflicted—to push the Big Beautiful Bill across the finish line. The movement must keep its eyes on the ball and kill the bill.

Focus on the Big Beautiful Bill.

Watch Politics Done Right T.V. here.

The spectacle is loud: Elon Musk and Donald Trump trade insults on social media, with the president hinting at canceling federal launch contracts. At the same time, Musk calls the bill that sparked their rupture a “disgusting abomination.” Cable networks pivot to breaking news on a revived Muslim-majority travel ban that will shut the U.S. door to families from a dozen nations beginning June 9. Harvard undergraduates protest through the Yard after Trump orders federal agencies to slash $100 million in research contracts and bars the university from enrolling new international students. Each story ricochets through the 24-hour cycle, generating outrage and counter-outrage—yet each one also drains oxygen from the only fight that will permanently re-wire the economy: the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill now sitting in the Senate.

Passed in the House by a single-vote margin on May 22, the 1,100-page reconciliation package pairs $3.7 trillion in permanent tax cuts tilted toward the top with the deepest federal safety-net cuts in modern history. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office projects it will swell deficits by $2.4 trillion over ten years and strip health coverage from 11 million people. Medicaid’s enhanced match for expansion states would fall from 90 percent to 80 percent. In contrast, a new per-capita cap all but guarantees states will ration care to children, people with disabilities, and seniors in nursing homes. SNAP loses $400 billion, eliminating food assistance for roughly six million households; meanwhile, $180 billion in green-energy credits are repealed, threatening 250,000 solar and wind jobs. In short, the bill siphons resources from working families to finance windfall cuts for corporations and the ultra-rich—a reverse Robin Hood engineered in plain sight.

That redistributionist core explains the White House’s “flood-the-zone” strategy. As Steve Bannon once bragged, chaos itself is the message: overwhelm reporters, scatter activists, and the policy payload glides through before the public can focus. The Musk drama offers tabloids a soap opera; the travel ban fires up xenophobic base voters; the Harvard crackdown stokes culture-war resentments against “elite universities.” None of those flash-bang grenades requires legislative wins. Still, each one diverts column inches and social media attention precisely when scrutiny of the bill would be most detrimental to the administration. The dance is cynical yet practical—unless civil society deliberately starves it of attention.

Actions to Recentralize the Fight

  1. Pin every narrative to the bill. Progressive communicators should open every segment, column, and post by tying the day’s distraction back to the bill’s concrete harms (“While Trump spars with Musk, the same bill they are arguing over will cancel Medicaid for 7,000 families in Jefferson County”). Repetition collapses the distraction loop.
  2. Localize the pain. Use state-level CBO tables and independent analyses to publish district-specific impact sheets: how many children lose health coverage, how many meals vanish, which clean-energy projects shutter. Pair numbers with human stories and deliver them to hometown papers, local TV, and Spanish-language outlets.
  3. Flood congressional phone lines in target states. The Senate map favors a grassroots push in the handful of purple and light-red states whose senators hold the bill’s fate. Coalitions should coordinate “10 calls in 10 days” drives, emphasizing that a “no” vote protects rural hospitals, veterans’ clinics, and renewable energy jobs.
  4. Launch watchdog “tick-tock” dashboards. Embed real-time trackers on union, faith, and advocacy websites—how much deficit the bill adds, how many constituents lose benefits—updating them daily until the floor vote. Transparently sourcing every datum neutralizes right-wing spin.
  5. Escalate visible protest only at the bill’s choke points. Save mass rallies for key markup hearings and the final cloture vote; smaller “distraction counteractions” (banner drops, social-media storms) can puncture the noise whenever a new spectacle surfaces.
  6. Frame victory as a defense of democracy, not charity. Stress that the bill redistributes upward by design, illustrating oligarchic capture. It is legalized theft. That moral frame energizes multi-racial working-class solidarity and inoculates against scapegoating narratives embedded in the travel ban and Harvard crackdown.

Conclusion

Trump can feud with the world’s richest man one hour and unveil a sweeping travel ban the next; he can sic federal auditors on Harvard while tweeting self-praise for “job-creating” tax cuts. Yet beneath each stunt lies a simple imperative: hurry the Big Beautiful Bill into law before the country absorbs its consequences. Progressive America must therefore meet spectacle with disciplined focus. Center the bill in every conversation, weaponize local data, pressure the persuadables, and refuse to chase every shiny outrage. Kill the bill, and the distractions collapse under their hollowness. The window is narrow, but collective attention—properly aimed—is the one tool capable of prying it open.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Click to share on Nextdoor (Opens in new window) Nextdoor
  • Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram

Like this:

Like Loading...

Viewers are encouraged to subscribe and join the conversation for more insightful commentary and to support progressive messages. Together, we can populate the internet with progressive messages that represent the true aspirations of most Americans.

Support Our Politics Done Right Store

Filed Under: General Tagged With: Big beautiful bill, Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Harvard

About Egberto Willies

Egberto Willies is a political activist, author, political blogger, radio show host, business owner, software developer, web designer, and mechanical engineer in Kingwood, TX. He is an ardent Liberal that believes tolerance is essential. His favorite phrase is “political involvement should be a requirement for citizenship”. Willies is currently a contributing editor to DailyKos, OpEdNews, and several other Progressive sites. He was a frequent contributor to HuffPost Live. He won the 2nd CNN iReport Spirit Award and was the Pundit of the Week.

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • LinkedIn

Support Independent Media

Support Politics Done Right on PayPal

Politic Done Right

RevContent


Support Independent Media



RSS Feed

  • RSS - Posts
Mastodon
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d