Saturday, May 23, 2026

DONALD JOHN TRUMPs "War On Laughter" (Andy Borowitz, via Heather Cox Richardson, May 21, 2026)


May be an image of television and text

From Andy Borowitz via Heather Cox Richardson:




  
When George W. Bush launched his War on Terror, I noted that it was the first time in history that someone had declared war on a human emotion. If Bush defeated terror, I wondered, what was next—shyness?
In his second term, Donald Trump has declared a War on Laughter, and I suspect it will be every bit as successful as Bush’s crusade.
Trump’s fear of being laughed at is nothing short of pathological. For years he’s been a crybaby about his portrayal on “Saturday Night Live.” And it was Barack Obama’s mockery of him at the 2011 White House Correspondents’ Dinner that reportedly impelled him to run for president. (Thanks, Obama.)
Like everything else rattling around in the commodious cavern of Trump’s brain, his fear of ridicule is unoriginal: he shares it with pretty much every dictator in the world. You might have noticed, for example, that there isn’t a thriving comedy scene in Pyongyang.
The autocrats’ anxiety is entirely justified. Comedy is their kryptonite. They rule by intimidation, and when we laugh at them, their power to scare us evaporates. As Mark Twain wrote in The Mysterious Stranger, “Against the assault of laughter nothing can stand.”
Which brings me to Stephen Colbert, who hosts his final “Late Show” tonight.
Last year, Colbert roasted the Quislings 
(Andy Borowtitz's article typo corrected for Ed Slavin blog post) 
at CBS’s parent company, Paramount, for donating $16 million to Trump’s presidential library to settle a risible lawsuit he filed against them. Shari Redstone, who had become Paramount’s biggest shareholder thanks to the demise of her icky father, was desperate to keep the government from scuttling a merger that would make her even richer. In light of her greedy groveling, Colbert was justified in calling the payment a “big fat bribe.”
Shortly after Colbert’s reckless decision to speak the truth, Trump’s proxies at CBS dutifully canceled his show, issuing the following statement: "This is purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night. It is not related in any way to the show’s performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount."
No offense to Colbert, but the funniest comedian at CBS is whoever wrote that statement. They might be the most hilarious words ever typed, with the possible exception of the phrase “Trump’s presidential library.”
I seriously doubt tonight’s farewell episode is the last we’ll hear from the indefatigably creative Colbert, who will likely move to a new platform where he’ll enjoy more freedom and financial success than he had at CBS.
And as for Trump, he might think he’s winning the War on Laughter—but much like George W. Bush, he’s going to discover that his mission is far from accomplished. He can cancel all the comedians he wants, but he will never make us stop laughing at him.

(Ed's note: corrected to capitalize Quislings. See Wikipedia biography:
Vidkun Quisling
Norwegian Minister-President Vidkun Quisling in civilian clothes
Quisling, c.1919
Minister President of the National Government of Norway
In office
1 February 1942 – 9 May 1945
Serving with Josef Terboven
Preceded byJohan Nygaardsvold
(as Prime Minister)
Succeeded byJohan Nygaardsvold
(as Prime Minister)
Minister of Defence
In office
12 May 1931 – 3 March 1933
Prime MinisterPeder Kolstad
Jens Hundseid
Preceded byTorgeir Anderssen-Rysst
Succeeded byJens Isak Kobro
Fører of the National Gathering
In office
13 May 1933 – 8 May 1945
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Personal details
BornVidkun Abraham Lauritz Jonssøn Quisling
18 July 1887
Fyresdal, Telemark, Sweden-Norway
Died24 October 1945 (aged 58)
Akershus Fortress, Oslo, Norway
Cause of deathExecution by firing squad
PartyNasjonal Samling (1933–45)
Other political
affiliations
Spouses
ProfessionMilitary officer, politician
Signature

Vidkun Abraham Lauritz Jonssøn Quisling (/ˈkwɪzlɪŋ/Norwegian: [ˈʋɪ̂dkʉnˈkʋɪ̂slɪŋ] ; 18 July 1887 – 24 October 1945

Addressing Questions Surrounding Hawaii’s Bold Move To Undo Citizens United (Tom Moore, Center for American Progress, April 29, 2026)

VIDEO: 2023 Hawaiʻi State Legislature Opens

Hawai'i S.B. 2471 takes effect July 1, 2027: nearly unanimous -- only one dissenting vote in Hawai'i bicameral legislature.  

From Center for American Progress:

Addressing Questions Surrounding Hawaii’s Bold Move To Undo Citizens United

Hawaii is poised to become the first state to use its long-dormant legal authority to drain corporate money from its elections—and the legal questions raised about the move have clean answers. 

When Hawaii drafted its constitution for eventual statehood in 1950, the delegates made very explicit the principle that runs through the laws of the 49 states that preceded it into the Union. “The power of the State to act in the general welfare shall never be impaired by the making of any irrevocable grant of special privileges or immunities,” reads Article I, Section 21 of the Hawaii Constitution.

Sixteen years after Citizens United started laying waste to America’s elections, the Hawaii legislature is poised to put that tool to unusually good use. S.B. 2471—a bill under which Hawaii would no longer grant artificial entities, including corporations, the power to spend in Hawaii’s politics—has passed both chambers with overwhelming bipartisan support. It is in conference committee now, one step away from Gov. Josh Green’s (D) desk.

Gov. Green has said he will sign a good bill that meets constitutional muster. That is the right test. S.B. 2471 meets it.

The bill, which is based upon the Center for American Progress’ “Corporate Power Reset,” is not a regulation of speech. It is a redefinition of corporate power. Aviam Soifer, former dean of the University of Hawaii’s law school, has studied the measure closely and concluded that it is squarely constitutional.

Soifer wrote to Gov. Green earlier this month. “As someone who has taught and written about American legal history, the First Amendment, and Constitutional law over many decades,” he wrote, “I can say unequivocally that States have exercised such authority for over two centuries—and the U.S. Supreme Court has affirmed this state authority repeatedly.”

While this state authority is not new or novel, it is dusty; no state legislature has redefined corporate powers this directly in roughly a century. It is natural that questions have arisen, including from Gov. Green, Hawaii Attorney General Anne E. Lopez, and some legislators. Here are some answers.

1. What does S.B. 2471 do?

The bill redefines the powers Hawaii grants to the corporations that operate within the state. It does not regulate what corporations say. It does not regulate what they spend. It defines what powers they have in the first place—and the powers Hawaii grants would no longer include the power to spend in Hawaii’s  politics.

Natural persons like you and me keep every political right they have today.

Political committees remain governed by existing campaign finance law. This bill applies to corporations, LLCs, partnerships, and similar artificial persons—entities that operate in Hawaii only because Hawaii law creates them or empowers them to do so.

2. Doesn’t this violate Citizens United?

No. As Dean Soifer put it: Citizens United “struck down a federal regulation that prohibited an already-empowered corporation from spending its resources in elections. Neither that case nor any other has addressed whether a state must grant political spending power in the first place.”

Every Supreme Court case on corporate political speech has assumed the corporation already had the underlying power to spend. S.B. 2471 does not regulate that power—rather, it no longer grants it. Citizens United does not reach the question because the question is upstream of where Citizens United operates.

Last week, the Montana Supreme Court recognized the same powers-versus-rights distinction in a related ballot-initiative case. Reviewing a Montana initiative built on the same architecture as S.B. 2471, the court rejected the attorney general’s claim that the measure revoked constitutional rights. The initiative, the court held, “speaks only to powers, not rights, and it does not expressly revoke any constitutional rights.” A state supreme court has now recognized the core distinction on which this approach rests.

3. Can Hawaii really define what out-of-state corporations can do here?

Yes. When a Delaware corporation registers to do business in Hawaii, Hawaii is doing something more than giving permission. It is affirmatively empowering that corporation to operate as a corporation in Hawaii. Without Hawaii’s recognition and authorization, the Delaware corporation cannot operate in Hawaii as a corporation. Delaware cannot reach across state lines and confer corporate status in Hawaii; only Hawaii can do that. Hawaii is not altering Delaware’s charter; it is defining the powers and privileges an entity may exercise while operating as a corporation in Hawaii.

This has been the law for a very long time. As the Supreme Court put it in Bank of Augusta v. Earle in 1839, a corporation “must dwell in the place of its creation, and cannot migrate to another sovereignty.” Recognition elsewhere happens only by the comity of the receiving state, on whatever terms that state chooses.

When Hawaii shortens the list of powers it grants its own corporations, the same shorter list applies to out-of-state corporations operating here. That is what every state’s foreign-corporation law has meant for a century.

Delaware can charter and empower a corporation to act in Delaware. Only Hawaii can empower an entity to act as a corporation in Hawaii.

4. What about the Commerce Clause?

Not an issue. The Commerce Clause, found in Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, gives Congress authority over interstate commerce. It also limits what individual states can do—particularly when a state tries to favor its own businesses over those from other states. When states get into trouble under the dormant Commerce Clause, the central concern is usually discrimination against or undue burdens on interstate commerce.

That is not what S.B. 2471 does. By disempowering domestic corporations from spending in Hawaii’s politics, the state is simultaneously disempowering out-of-state corporations to the exact same extent. Domestic and foreign entities are treated identically. There is no discrimination, no protectionism, no economic favoritism—none of the things the Commerce Clause exists to prevent. Nor is this a law that burdens interstate commerce as commerce; it defines the powers of entities operating under Hawaii’s legal authority and applies the same rule to domestic and foreign entities alike.

5. In a recent interview, Gov. Green said the bill “would prevent this kind of spending here in our state, but it would not prevent spending from the outside. You have a lot of big super PACs from the outside that would weigh in and then it becomes you know, outside forces controlling us.” Is that right?

The governor is raising something real. But the bill addresses it more fully than may be apparent.

The bill does not get rid of super PACs. But it does stop the one-two punch of dark-money groups giving to super PACs, which is what has been hiding the source of huge sums of money for the past 16 years.

The bill stops corporations—no matter where they’re from—from spending in Hawaii’s politics. This includes the dark-money groups that hide the people, corporations, and special interests that give to them. So super PACs would still be able to spend in Hawaii’s politics, but they could only spend money they’ve received from human beings. Any “outside forces” spending in Hawaii’s politics would be human—with their names disclosed.

6. Does this bill create a new burden on Hawaii state agencies?

No. S.B. 2471 does not create a new regulatory scheme—it operates inside the oldest one in American law.

When a corporation acts beyond the powers its state has granted, the act is ultra vires: outside the entity’s authority and void as a matter of law. The doctrine is older than the country. It dominated American corporate law enforcement throughout the 19th century, when corporate charters routinely listed specific powers, and acts beyond those powers were routinely struck down. It hasn’t been heavily used in recent decades only because state legislatures stopped writing limited-power charters—they shifted to all-purpose grants that left little to challenge. The doctrine itself never went away.

What that means in practice: The consequence of an unauthorized corporate act runs through ordinary litigation. A shareholder, the corporation itself, a contracting party, or the attorney general can raise the issue in court. Hawaii’s Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs (DCCA) records the resulting status change after a court has ruled—the same administrative work the department performs whenever any corporate status changes for any reason. DCCA is not investigating, prosecuting, or policing. It is recording.

The bill creates no new enforcement bureaucracy and does not turn DCCA into a campaign finance police force. It uses a centuries-old mechanism that has handled exactly this kind of question for as long as American corporations have existed.

7. Gov. Green has said he will sign a “good bill” that “meets constitutional muster.” Does this bill meet that test?

Yes. The constitutional questions about S.B. 2471 have been raised, examined, and answered. The First Amendment question has an answer. The Commerce Clause question has an answer. The federalism question—whether Hawaii can reach corporations chartered elsewhere—has been settled Supreme Court doctrine for nearly two centuries.

Hawaii’s own constitutional drafters anticipated exactly this kind of legislation when they wrote Article I, Section 21. S.B. 2471 is a literal exercise of the power that provision preserves. As Dean Soifer notes, Hawaii “may have the strongest constitutional foundation for such legislation of any state.”

The bill is constitutional. Once it clears conference, it is ready to be signed.

The positions of American Progress, and our policy experts, are independent, and the findings and conclusions presented are those of American Progress alone. American Progress would like to acknowledge the many generous supporters who make our work possible.



PART OF A SERIES
The Honolulu State Capitol Building is seen surrounded by hibiscus state flowers in Oahu, Hawaii, c. 1969. (Getty/Jeffrey Greenberg)

When Hawaii drafted its constitution for eventual statehood in 1950, the delegates made very explicit the principle that runs through the laws of the 49 states that preceded it into the Union. “The power of the State to act in the general welfare shall never be impaired by the making of any irrevocable grant of special privileges or immunities,” reads Article I, Section 21 of the Hawaii Constitution.