Afroman Destroys Trump in Landmark “Lemon Poundcake” Verdict

Today should become a national American holiday: Lemon Pound Cake Day.

An Ohio jury just delivered one of the clearest freedom verdicts in recent memory. It took less than a day to throw out all thirteen claims of defamation, invasion of privacy, the lot, that had been brought by seven Adams County sheriff’s deputies against rapper Afroman. The deputies claimed they should earn $3.9 million for causing him harm. They got nothing.

The facts are plain. Deputies raided Afroman’s home in Winchester, Ohio with long guns and pistols drawn, smashed his door down, and seized over $5,000 in cash in August 2022. They based the assault on a dubious warrant for drug trafficking and kidnapping. No charges were filed. He was in Chicago, not home. No drugs. No kidnapping. When the sheriff’s office returned the cash taken from him, $400 had been skimmed off. They told him they weren’t responsible for this loss or their property damage either.

Afroman had security cameras that captured the targeted abuse. He used the footage to make music videos, most notably the song “Lemon Pound Cake,” which has been viewed over 3 million times on YouTube. It features surveillance clips of white heavyset deputies breaking down the door, then pausing in the kitchen to eye a lemon cake. Afroman narrates the intrusions to a beat. It is a masterpiece, easily one of the best American protest songs in history.

The deputies, invoking historic white supremacist empire doctrine, sued to suppress Black speech. They filed claims of emotional distress, humiliation, death threats verging on being accountable for their actions. Deputy Lisa Phillips wanted $1.5 million. Sgt. Randy Walters wanted $1 million and told jurors he was humiliated when his daughter came home from school crying because classmates said her mother was making love to Afroman, a reference to lyrics in a song called “Randy Walters is a Son of a Bitch.

Afroman, the true patriot, showed up to court every day in an American flag suit. His testimony was the whole case in miniature:

“I got freedom of speech. After they run around my house with guns, kicked down my door, I got the right to kick a can in my backyard, use my freedom of speech, turn my bad times into a good time.”

“I don’t go to their house, kick down their doors, flip them off on their surveillance cameras, then try to play the victim and sue them.”

“All of this is their fault. If they hadn’t wrongly raided my house, there would be no lawsuit, I would not know their names, they wouldn’t be on my home surveillance system, and there would be no songs.”

He also explained why he brought a local TV crew along when he went to collect his money from the sheriff’s station:

I didn’t wanna get beat up or Epstein’d at the sheriff’s station after I seen them running around my house with AR15s.

God damn American hero, right there.

His defense attorney, David Osborne Jr., put the legal framework to work for everyone to see: the deputies are public officials held to a higher standard, and social commentary on their outrageously unjust conduct is protected speech.

No reasonable person would expect a police officer not to be criticized.

Meanwhile, Afroman’s own countersuit for the property damage the deputies caused during the raid had already been dismissed by Judge Jonathan Hein without a hearing. A victim of police assault had legitimately suffered damages from unwarranted acts. Click of a button, some little office somewhere, Afroman’s words. The institution protects its own until a jury got in the room and called out the imbalance.

Trump Talk Time

To nobody’s surprise, aggressive acts of white supremacists requires invisibility to remain legitimate.

These KKK “X” uniforms of an “invisible empire” were a byproduct of President Woodrow Wilson’s promotion of costumed violence against Blacks.

America First literally calls itself the invisible empire and walks around with white hoods over their head, ever since Woodrow Wilson screened the white sheets vigilante thriller in the White House in 1915. The radical racists abusing their power see documentation of them as the actual threat.

The Economist/The New Yorker weren’t wrong
Screen capture from “Birth of a Nation”, the propaganda film President Wilson spread to restart the KKK and incite violence across America.

Lynching, including public torture, worked in America as social and political control affecting law enforcement because it was public but unrecorded, witnessed by the community as spectacle, but not captured in a form that could travel beyond it and reframe it as what it was. The moment reporters and eventually cameras showed up, the political cost of America First changed. Emmett Till’s mother understood this perfectly.

Open the casket, force people to see.


A 17-year-old civil-rights demonstrator is attacked by a police dog, May 3, 1963, Birmingham, AL. President John F. Kennedy discussed this widely seen photo at a White House meeting the next afternoon. | “Once people saw those photos,” says Prof. Brinkley, “they were repulsed by the Southern Jim Crow bigot system.” Photo: Bill Hudson/Associated Press

That’s the mechanism Trump is naming out loud today and whining he will shut down.

The American press has been called liars by him because that campaign worked so well for Hitler, but now Trump is elevating his accusations to treason like it’s 1837 in America again. It’s being called treasonous because it reveals the crimes.

On March 15, Trump posted on Truth Social:

media outlets reporting on the Iran war should “be brought up on Charges for TREASON for the dissemination of false information.”

Not a joke. Reporting on a war, as this blog certainly does, is described by Trump as treason. The maximum penalty for treason?

Open the casket, force people to see.

FCC Chair Brendan Carr followed up by threatening to revoke broadcast licenses. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth whined from the Pentagon podium that networks were running chyrons reading “Mideast War Intensifies” when they should instead fluff and puff about “Iran Increasingly Desperate.”

The footage, the documentation, the record all breaks the framework. Power needs the act and the narrative about the act to be the same thing. An independent record creates a gap between what happened and what was supposed to have happened, and that gap is where accountability lives.

Afroman used a beat and security camera footage to speak the truth to power. The deputies’ lawyer literally argued in court that a victim giving the public a report about a raid was the harm. Not the raid. The reporting that showed evidence. The reframing, with evidence. An American Black man shining a bright light through the sheets of injustice, instead of cowering to the system of false authority.

CNN’s Daniel Dale documented that when the White House provided examples of outlets spreading the fake carrier video Trump raged about, not a single one was American. There was one Israeli, one Saudi, one Turkish. The treason accusation he cooked up was aimed at an American press corps, even as they hadn’t done what Trump accused them of doing. He wanted to punish Americans for the crime of foreign coverage itself.

Trump’s world is violence against non-whites as hidden policy, while American documentation of the truth is the treason.

After the verdict, Afroman with tears of joy on his face, American flag suit, courthouse steps, corrected the framing one more time:

I didn’t win. America won. America still has freedom of speech. It’s still for the people by the people.

He trumped the Trump.

The jury agreed in under a day.

The question is whether the rest of the world does or Hegseth will prove exactly why he’s covered himself in white supremacist tattoos and was appointed for being the guy who loses his grip. Here’s the video of three F-15E shot down by friendly fire in one night.

Afroman said he didn’t want to be Epstein’d. He won in court. Nearly 200 Iranian little girls are dead from Hegseth’s war crimes, among the many others killed from his expanding mistakes. When will their day in court come?

Palantir Keeps Quoting Nazi Goebbels as Their Business Model

Thomas Edsall’s latest New York Times essay opens with a Peter Thiel quote from 2010 that deserves far more scrutiny for historic parallels than the NYT gives it.

We could never win an election on getting certain things because we were in such a small minority, but maybe you could actually unilaterally change the world without having to constantly convince people and beg people and plead with people who are never going to agree with you through technological means, and this is where I think technology is this incredible alternative to politics.

A minority that can’t win elections. A conviction that persuasion is futile. A technological mechanism to bypass democratic consent entirely.

This is a very well studied pattern from 1930s Germany.

Guess who?

Joseph Goebbels articulated the same exact structure in 1928, using radio and institutional capture rather than Silicon Valley.

The Playbook

Move Goebbels (1928-1935) Thiel/Palantir (2010-2026)
1. Admit minority status “We are an anti-parliamentarian party” that rejects democratic institutions “We were in such a small minority” that elections are unwinnable
2. Declare persuasion futile “We oppose a fake democracy that treats the intelligent and the foolish in the same way” “People who are never going to agree with you”
3. Identify non-democratic mechanism “We enter the Reichstag to arm ourselves with democracy’s weapons”; radio as “the Eighth Great Power” “Technology is this incredible alternative to politics”
4. Execute bypass Enabling Act dismantles republic through constitutional means Palantir builds surveillance and control infrastructure for intelligence and military without democratic deliberation
5. Pull up the ladder “We would deny to our adversaries without any consideration the means which were granted to us” Karp (2026): anyone doing this without military cover is “in an insane asylum”

Step five is where we are, so hopefully people start seeing the problem soon. The NYT certainly isn’t helping by acting like Nazism is now the norm. Karp’s CNBC appearance, quoted at length in Edsall’s piece, reads like we are supposed to just accept a warning. It isn’t normal. It’s Nazi doctrine being delivered to the public as if that’s just the way it is in 2026.

Karp says AI will somehow on its own destroy the economic and political power of only the educated, largely Democratic voters. He says anyone who thinks this will “work out politically” without capture of the military is delusional. He says the “only justification” for absorbing societal disruption is for national security.

Every sentence sounds like general concern. Every sentence is constructed to benefit Palantir. The company already has corrupted the system to force collection of defense contracts, without accountability for technological failures. It has cemented intelligence community relationships, and it built the institutional armor that Karp says you need to undermine voters. When he tells the rest of Silicon Valley that technology without political cover is reckless, the operative message is: we are in control and you can’t do this without us.

That’s straight out of Nazi history. Karp was only missing a shout out to “my struggle” and Goebbels 1928.

Hu Contrasts This

The most helpful voice in Edsall’s piece belongs to Margaret Hu, who directs the Digital Democracy Lab at William & Mary. Where Karp treats replacing voters with technology as a management problem, something to cover in the right political framing, Hu names it correctly as the problem itself.

A.I. systems and their techno-kings have the potential to manifest almost monarchical aspirations.

“Techno-kings” with “monarchical aspirations.” That’s far more than an observation about labor markets or partisan realignment. That’s the correct diagnosis of the political structure being built. Hu goes further:

The A.I. cold war is not just a tech innovation race for military advantage. It is a race for global dominance economically and culturally, and geopolitically.

This is the frame Karp doesn’t want you to use. Karp’s version: ending democracy with information warfare tools (whether newspapers, radios or AI) is inevitable, the only question is whether you wrap it in a flag. Hu’s version: the disruption is a political choice made by identifiable actors pursuing identifiable power, and the military framing is just part of the power grab, not a check on it.

Karp says technology needs politics. Hu says technology is politics. More specifically, the political campaign of concentration is masquerading as inevitability.

What Edsall Misses

Edsall’s essay is valuable for assembling sources, particularly the Brynjolfsson and Hitzig paper showing that AI demolishes Hayek’s argument against central planning. But Edsall treats Karp’s CNBC quotes that echo Nazism as a “thoughtful reaction” rather than what they are: the CEO of a surveillance company explaining to his peers how to make the end of democracy politically survivable.

The Thiel quote at the top of the column and the Karp quotes near the bottom are the same perspectives. They’re the two phases of the same Nazi project Hitler used to seize power.

Thiel announced he was using the Goebbels theory. Karp is delivering the after-action report and next steps. Karp says “nobody should do what we did” from the commanding position of having already done it.

That’s just like Hitler. It’s an announcement they’ve built a moat with a drawbridge. And Palantir is expecting they will be the only ones to survive inside.

Trump Losing Grip on Iran and It’s No Surprise Why

Trump’s military strategy is a fat guy on a couch eating potato chips, watching TV, telling everyone he’d destroy any professional fighter in the ring. He’s never trained. He refuses to train. He fired his trainers. But he’s the loudest mouth in the room, so he must be the toughest. Right?

Iran just rang the bell.

The Chips

Four years. That’s how long Ukraine has been running the most intensive drone warfare laboratory in human history. Outgunned and outmanned since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Kyiv built a domestic drone industry from garage startups and kitchen tables. They figured out that a $500 first-person-view quadcopter could kill a million-dollar tank. They developed cheap “Sting” interceptors to shoot down Iranian-made Shahed drones at a 90% kill rate. They iterated, tested, failed, adapted, and iterated again with constraints under live fire, every single day, against the exact same weapons Iran is now using against American bases.

That was the gym. That was the weight room. Under Biden, the United States was at least in the same vicinity by sending weapons, funding production, and getting some knowledge transfer from the most intensive drone conflict in modern history. The smart play was to scale that investment: embed more liaisons, surge production lines for both Ukrainian and American needs, and build the institutional muscle for whatever came next.

MAGA arrogance killed it. Republican obstruction held Ukraine aid hostage for months in Congress while Trump promised he’d stop all wars immediately. The very preparation window that could have built surge capacity, tested counter-drone systems, and scaled cheap interceptor production was strangled by the same political movement that then rushed headlong into a Gulf war without any of it. They blocked the training, then stepped into the ring.

When Trump finally took office in January 2025, he didn’t just stop what was left, he actively reversed course and said no more working out. He cut Ukraine off to “negotiate,” handed Russia leverage, and let the knowledge pipeline go cold. Defense budget attention went to culture war purges instead of procurement reform. Institutional energy went to loyalty tests instead of doctrine adaptation. Pete Hegseth got the Pentagon as a man whose qualification for overseeing the world’s most complex military was … losing his grip.

The Announcement

Sun Tzu’s most basic lesson is to know yourself and know your enemy. Trump’s contribution to military strategy was to announce, publicly, that he would do neither.

Renaming Defense back to War. Stripping Geneva Convention protections. Promising unconstrained force. This wasn’t strategy. It was a press release telling every adversary on earth exactly how America planned to fight: escalation dominance through brute expenditure. Maximum force, zero adaptation.

Every asymmetric fighter in history just smiled. That’s the guy you want to face in the ring. He’s the one who talks a lot, only knows how to throw haymakers, and thinks training and cardio is for losers.

The entire history of post-WWII conflict confirms the pattern. Vietnam. Ethiopia. Angola. Afghanistan. Iraq. Somalia. Overwhelming force without strategic intelligence, legal legitimacy, and allied support produces tactical wins and strategic defeat. Every time. Without exception. Trump walked into 2026 asymmetric battle with 1968 logic applied to a 2022 technology domain, having shriveled the one muscle that could have kept him current.

The Ring

NPR reported this week that U.S. officials are already worried about running out of interceptor missiles after just weeks of fighting Iran. Weeks. Against one mid-tier power. Patriot interceptors cost millions per shot. THAAD interceptors cost millions per shot. They’re firing them at Shaheds that cost Tehran somewhere between $20,000 and $50,000 each. Iran doesn’t need to win in the air. It just needs to keep the drones coming until the American magazines are empty.

This is the professional fighter dancing around the fat guy, waiting for him to gas out. Every wild swing costs energy. Every missed punch brings the end closer. Iran planned for exactly this. They scaled Shahed production for years, sold the design to Russia, watched Ukraine develop countermeasures, and calculated that the American system was optimized for expensive kills against cheap threats. The math was never a secret. Anyone paying attention knew the equation was unsustainable.

Six American servicemembers were killed from a Shahed hit on an undefended operations center in Kuwait. The U.S. embassy in Riyadh took two drone strikes. The embassy in Baghdad got hit. UAE air defenses have engaged over 1,600 drones. And the stockpiles are draining.

The Refused Cornerman

Here’s where it becomes unforgivable. Ukraine, as the country that solved this exact problem, offered to help. Kyiv offered its Sting interceptors, cheap drone-on-drone systems that cost a fraction of a Patriot missile and actually work against Shaheds at scale. Ukraine offered the knowledge that comes from four years of continuous high-intensity adaptation against these weapons.

Trump went on Fox News and said:

We don’t need their help in drone defense. We know more about drones than anybody. We have the best drones in the world, actually.

That’s the couch potato turning down a personal training session because he already knows everything about fitness. While actively losing the fight.

The rejection wasn’t just arrogant. It was operationally suicidal. A leader secure enough to accept help would actually be strong. The one insisting he’s already the best while hemorrhaging interceptors and personnel is telling every adversary exactly where to hit him.

The Cardio Problem

Stockpiles can be rebuilt, in theory. But theory requires an industrial base and fiscal capacity that actually function. Raytheon’s Patriot production line was already backlogged. These are complex systems with multi-year lead times, specialized workforces, and deep supplier networks, which are exactly the kind of infrastructure that tariff chaos disrupts. You can’t surge-produce precision munitions when you’re simultaneously waging trade wars against the countries that supply rare earth materials and electronic components.

Then there’s the oil dimension sitting right in the middle of this conflict. Petroleum facilities hit in the UAE. The Strait of Hormuz under threat. If energy prices spike hard enough, the cascade hits everything — consumer spending, federal revenue, borrowing costs. You’re trying to fund a war and restock munitions during an economic crisis your own trade policy accelerated. The couch potato doesn’t just lack cardio. He’s been eating himself into cardiac arrest.

Everyone Else Learned

While Trump was on the couch, the rest of the world was in the gym.

Iran scaled a drone production capability that can sustain weeks of saturation attacks against the most expensive military on earth. Ukraine built an entire domestic defense industry from scratch under fire. The Houthis demonstrated that a non-state actor with cheap missiles could disrupt global shipping and tie down a carrier group. Europe started rearming independently, having concluded that American protection is a depreciating asset.

Every country watching this conflict is learning two things at once: American protection is unreliable, and cheap asymmetric systems work against American power. The Saudis, Emiratis, South Koreans, and Taiwanese are all running the same calculation right now, and none of their answers include depending on Washington.

Pride Before the Fall

Empires typically don’t fall to direct or even peer competitors. They fall to the accumulated cost of refusing to progress from mistakes. Spain, Britain, the Soviet Union and so forth were convinced that unregulated excess was an answer right up until it wasn’t. Stripping legal constraints doesn’t project strength. It signals a system that has lost the capacity for self-regulation, which is exactly the vulnerability of rapid excess that a smart adversary probes.

David doesn’t beat Goliath because David is stronger. David beats Goliath because Goliath is so convinced of his own size that he can’t imagine losing, can’t adapt when the fight doesn’t go as planned, and exhausts himself swinging at air while the smaller, faster opponent waits for the opening.

Trump announced he would play the Goliath, without awareness. Then he proved it, in every way that matters.

Trump’s New Minesweepers for Hormuz Go MIA, Spotted in Malaysia

Minesweeping Elvis has left the building.

Two-thirds of America’s Persian Gulf “mine countermeasure capability” just got busted by a shipspotter in Penang, Malaysia. Not declared by the Pentagon. Not briefed in Congress. A guy with a camera at a container terminal said, uh, what the hell.

Source: Twitter

USS Tulsa and USS Santa Barbara, two of three Independence-class Littoral Combat Ships known as the entire US Navy mine warfare force in the Middle East, were photographed docked at North Butterworth Container Terminal on March 15.

Their homeport is Bahrain. Bahrain is 3,500 nautical miles away. You know, where the US has been at war with Iran since February 28.

Iran’s mine doctrine is the reason these ships exist in their current “countermine” configuration.

The Gap

Again, as I’ve recently blogged, Trump had his four best minesweepers in January loaded onto a heavy lift ship and sent to Philadelphia for demolition. The Royal Navy decommissioned its last traditional minesweeper in Bahrain this year too.

And the official replacements are the Tulsa, Santa Barbara, and Canberra. These three LCS ships were just fitted with modular MCM mission packages at huge expense. Three large metal ships replacing four small non-metal ones, introducing an untested system, unfit for Gulf waters, against an adversary that has thousands of mines and decades of doctrine for deploying them in exactly the strait where traffic has now slowed to only what the Iranians decide.

Two of those three ships now sitting on the wrong side of the Indian Ocean is curious at least. Canberra’s location is “unknown”.

Finger Pointing

The War Zone reached out to CENTCOM, which directed them to Fifth Fleet. Fifth Fleet directed them back to CENTCOM. The Royal Malaysian Navy, which normally announces foreign warship arrivals on social media, said nothing. USNI News sources described it as a “logistics stop” and declined further comment.

Planet Labs satellite imagery shows no US warships in port in Manama since February 23, five days before strikes began. Clearing the port was prudent. Sending the mine warfare assets 3,500 miles east was… something else.

The Ol’ Switcheroo

Defense officials told reporters on Friday that missiles, definitely not the Iranian sea mines, are currently the largest threat to merchant shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. Read that slowly. Consider how many press conferences we have heard that Iranian missile capability has been “obliterated”. It’s not a reassurance here. The Navy sounds like it’s reframing the threat environment to match a capability it no longer has in theater. Or maybe the Navy realized the three ships have a critical vulnerability, beyond sucking at minesweeping.

At least twenty crude oil tankers and cargo ships have been struck by projectiles since February 28. Trump is failing to convince his former enemies, the NATO allies, to contribute ships for a convoy operation to reopen Hormuz. US officials say American escorts are unprepared, won’t be ready for weeks. So what’s with these new mine clearance ships sneaking off to Malaysia?

Are they being used to chase ships instead? Did someone decide a 40-knot trimaran with anti-ship missiles and boarding capability is more useful chasing Iranian sanctions traffic through the Malacca Strait than hunting mines it probably can’t find anyway?

LCS Can’t Find Itself

The LCS MCM mission package has been a decade late and plagued with reliability problems since inception. The concept envisions laboriously hunting individual mines one by one with unmanned systems, giving an estimated clearance rate of roughly two mines per hour against minefields that are expected to number in the thousands. Tulsa’s unmanned surface vessel, riddled with points of failure, infamously went rogue after its tow bracket quit.

Something Smells Rotten

The US appears to have pre-conceded capabilities it spent decades building. The Avengers were retired by Trump as a bureaucratic fait accompli a month before they were needed. The snowflake LCS MCM system was declared operational abruptly as an institutional checkbox. And when the contingency these systems were specifically designed for actually arrived, given headlines announcing Iran mining the Strait of Hormuz as everyone expected, the LCS fleet pushed off to somewhere else and nobody in the chain of command wants to say why.

The ships arrived in Penang on March 14 and departed March 16. A Russian task group had just left the same berth two weeks earlier. That’s probably just a coincidence. The rest of it isn’t.