0:00
/
0:00
Transcript

Trump’s Attempted Military Takeover Triggers Constitutional Defenses From Judges, Prosecutors, And The Brass Who Won’t Break Their Oaths

The FiveStack | Oct 6

When 800 generals and admirals refused to applaud on command at Quantico last Tuesday, they drew a red line. By this weekend, that line held—reinforced by federal judges, career prosecutors, and even Trump’s own appointees who’ve decided the Constitution matters more than loyalty to a president demanding they commit crimes in his name.

5️⃣ Supreme Court Denies Maxwell’s Appeal

The Supreme Court declined to hear Ghislaine Maxwell’s appeal Monday, keeping her 20-year sentence intact for sex trafficking minors with Jeffrey Epstein. Maxwell argued Epstein’s 2007 Florida plea deal should have shielded her from New York prosecution, but the DOJ successfully argued the agreement was geographically limited. Her attorneys have been positioning for a Trump pardon, including two days of meetings with Deputy AG Todd Blanche in July before her quiet transfer to a lower-security Texas facility. Tucker Carlson and Steve Bannon have spent years pushing Epstein conspiracy theories—Maxwell may be their next cause. But for now, the Court said no, and she stays locked up for crimes involving hundreds of victims over three decades.

4️⃣ Judge’s Home Destroyed After Death Threats

South Carolina Circuit Court Judge Diane Goodstein’s $1.55 million beachfront home exploded Saturday, weeks after she received multiple death threats for blocking Trump’s attempt to seize 3.3 million South Carolina voter registration records. The threats began immediately after her September 2nd ruling. Her husband, former state Senator Arnold Goodstein, their son, and another person escaped by jumping from an upper floor—all hospitalized. She was walking her dogs when the blast occurred at 11:30 a.m. SLED is investigating whether it was arson or accident, but the timing is impossible to ignore: Stephen Miller and MAGA activists had doxed her and flooded her with harassment after she ruled against Trump. This is what happens when a White House deputy chief of staff calls judges part of “left-wing terror networks.”

3️⃣ Prosecutor Refuses Trump’s Manufactured Case

Elizabeth Yusi, the top federal prosecutor in Norfolk, Virginia, is refusing to charge New York Attorney General Letitia James with mortgage fraud despite intense pressure from Trump—and now we know why. Bill Pulte, Trump’s appointee running the Federal Housing Finance Agency, bypassed his own inspector general when making criminal referrals against James and other Trump enemies, including Fed Governor Lisa Cook. Seven sources confirm Pulte skipped the internal watchdog office designed to prevent exactly this kind of partisan abuse, going straight to the Justice Department with referrals based on “media reports” rather than actual evidence. Trump already fired one acting U.S. attorney who refused to prosecute James, then installed his personal lawyer with zero prosecutorial experience. Yusi can see the scheme and won’t play along—which means she’s likely next to be fired.

2️⃣ Trump’s Own Judges Block Guard Deployments

Federal judges delivered Trump stunning weekend defeats, blocking National Guard deployments to Portland and Chicago as Illinois and Oregon sued to stop “Trump’s invasion.” U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut—a Trump appointee—issued increasingly broad restraining orders, ultimately blocking any state’s Guard from deploying to Portland after finding protests “were not significantly violent or disruptive” and Trump hadn’t met the legal threshold. Stephen Miller called it “legal insurrection.” Trump called the judge—his own nominee—a “lunatic” and claimed Portland was “burning to the ground.” Reality: protests rarely exceeded two dozen people before Trump announced deployments. The last time a president deployed a state’s Guard against the governor’s will was 1965. By Monday, 200 Texas Guard troops were en route to Chicago anyway, Illinois had filed suit, and Chicago’s mayor announced “ICE-free zones.”

1️⃣ The Generals’ Silent Refusal

At Quantico on September 30th, Trump ordered 800 generals and admirals to applaud him—and they refused. That silence wasn’t protocol. It was defiance. Days earlier, Pentagon messages showed officials knew deploying the 82nd Airborne to Portland would “cause headlines” and asked Trump for written orders as “top cover.” He apparently refused. When Trump tried going around them by federalizing National Guard units instead, his own appointees in the judiciary blocked it. The sequence reveals everything: military brass drew a constitutional red line, Trump attempted to circumvent it, and the courts, governors, and federalism itself snapped into defensive formation. Rep. Madeleine Dean was caught on a live mic demanding Speaker Johnson respond to an “unhinged president.” Illinois Governor Pritzker called it a “manufactured performance” and accused Trump of wanting to “create the war zone.” The generals held the line. The judges are holding the line. The question is whether it holds through what comes next.


The FiveStack is available as an audio podcast on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Advertising inquiries email next@narativ.org. The FiveStack is a co-production of deanblundell.substack.com and narativ.org.Thank you

, , , , , and many others for tuning into my live video with ! Join me for my next live video in the app.

Get more from Zev Shalev in the Substack app
Available for iOS and Android

Discussion about this video

User's avatar