This essay examines the systematic destruction of American constitutional democracy during the first year of President Donald Trump's second administration (January 2025–January 2026). Written from the perspective of a Canadian citizen and scholar, it documents the authoritarian consolidation of power through mass deportations resulting in documented deaths and wrongful removal of U.S. citizens, systematic defiance of federal court orders, weaponization of the Department of Justice against political opponents, unprecedented purges of military leadership, economic warfare against democratic allies justified by fabricated claims, and the deliberate destruction of institutional capacity for oversight and accountability. Drawing on assessments from over 1,000 law professors, multiple former Defense Secretaries, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and historians of fascism who have drawn explicit parallels to 1930s Germany, the essay establishes that expert consensus identifies these actions as authoritarian governance constituting a constitutional crisis. The philosophical core of the essay engages with the American Founders' understanding of tyranny, power, and the conditions necessary for republican government, demonstrating how current events represent precisely the consolidation of arbitrary power that the constitutional architecture was designed to prevent. Through analysis of foundational texts including the Declaration of Independence, The Federalist Papers, and Jefferson's writings on natural rights, the essay argues that the current crisis vindicates the Founders' warnings about the fragility of republican government and the permanent threat of tyrannical ambition. The essay concludes with a philosophical argument about the moral obligations of citizens when constitutional democracy faces existential threat, examining the tension between partisan loyalty and fidelity to the constitutional order itself, and calling upon Americans across the political spectrum to defend the institutional foundations that make all political contestation possible. Written from Canada, it represents both a warning from a democratic ally and an act of solidarity with Americans fighting to preserve their republic.
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Daniel Toupin (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69746090bb9d90c67120a634 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18342096
Daniel Toupin
Golden West College
Golden West College
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