How do you build a dictatorship inside a democracy? Not with tanks in the streets, but by quietly reshaping who the security forces answer to — and why. Brendan Miller lays out a disturbingly coherent pattern: loyalists replacing experienced leadership across the military, FBI, and ICE, the politicization of agencies that are supposed to serve the Constitution rather than a single person, and the shielding of these forces from legal accountability in ways that echo authoritarian playbooks from other countries.
The most striking thread is the transformation of ICE into something resembling a secret police force — operating with minimal transparency, expanding its surveillance and detention infrastructure, and functioning increasingly outside traditional legal oversight. Meanwhile, the military and intelligence agencies are being redirected toward domestic political aims, from suppressing protests to conducting retribution-based investigations against perceived enemies.
What makes this analysis land isn't the suggestion of a grand conspiracy. Miller argues the opposite — that democratic backsliding doesn't require a master plan. Actions driven by instinct, grievance, and chaos can systematically erode democratic norms just as effectively. And once those norms are weakened, any future crisis — election disputes, civil unrest — becomes a ready-made pretext for the final consolidation of power.
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Sources for this video. Corrections:
21:39: The National is a programme of CBC News (of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation), not CBS News (of Columbia Broadcasting Systems).