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Longtime journalist Meredith Shiner argues that Democrats should refuse to fund a government that weaponizes federal power against its own citizens.
The “randomized terror” in Chicago isn’t chaos — it’s strategy, designed to instill fear and feed authoritarian propaganda.
Edwin Eisendrath insists the antidote to that fear is organized compassion, a civic resistance rooted in everyday solidarity.
Together, they demand that Democrats stop mistaking procedural politics for moral leadership.
Meredith Shiner’s “forever shutdown” isn’t nihilism — it’s defiance. She warned that reopening government under these conditions means legitimizing an executive branch waging war on its own people. “We have to expect more from the people who have more power than us,” she said, arguing that Democrats’ narrow focus on healthcare subsidies misses the larger emergency: A militarized state turning cities like Chicago into testing grounds for authoritarian control. For Shiner, this isn’t a metaphor — it’s a moral line, one that Democrats keep crossing by pretending normal politics can exist in abnormal times.
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Edwin Eisendrath took that warning and turned it toward hope. He pointed to the ordinary Chicagoans walking children home from school, documenting abuses, and dining out in solidarity as proof that compassion can outmatch coercion. “You’re going to bring your random terror,” he said. “We are going to bring our compassion.” In a city known for its divisions, that collective defiance has become its most powerful act of unity, a living rebuke to the spectacle of fear playing out on the streets. It’s a reminder that civic love, when organized, can be more disruptive than any show of force.
What both agreed on is that the failure isn’t just institutional — it’s moral. Democrats, too comfortable in the old order, have ceded their agency to procedure and courts instead of people and purpose. Real democracy was never won in courtrooms — it was built by movements willing to confront power directly. Unless Democrats rediscover that muscle of mass participation, they’ll keep mistaking motion for progress and governance for justice. Together, they made the case that democracy only survives when citizens act like it’s theirs to defend.
Tune in to this urgent conversation with Edwin Eisendrath and Meredith Shiner.
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