April 4, 2025
By the Center for Racial and Disability Justice
In the tumultuous years of Donald Trump’s political reign, one theme persists like a drumbeat: gaslighting. From his earliest days on the campaign trail to his 2025 return to executive power, Trump and his administration have engaged in a relentless campaign to manipulate public perception, distort reality, and sow division. These tactics are not merely rhetorical; they are calculated strategies that undermine democratic institutions, disorient the public, and consolidate authoritarian control.
While Trump popularized the term “fake news,” its roots stretch deep into American history. In the 1800s, newspapers often printed outright fabrications for profit, such as the 1835 “Great Moon Hoax” published by The New York Sun. Publications blurred the lines between fact and fiction, manipulating readers for both economic and political gain.
The 20th century saw the emergence of state-driven disinformation as a political tool. Nazi Germany’s Joseph Goebbels and the USSR’s propaganda ministries institutionalized the manipulation of truth, not just to support regime narratives, but to obliterate dissent. The term Lügenpresse — “lying press” — was used by Nazis to delegitimize critical media, a tactic echoed decades later in Trump’s repeated declarations that critical outlets were the “enemy of the people.” During the Cold War, disinformation campaigns flourished globally, from CIA-backed psychological operations to Soviet-era “active measures.” These efforts weren’t just about lying; they were about constructing an alternate reality.
Trump’s revival of the term “fake news” marked a dangerous shift in political discourse: rather than describing misinformation, he used it to discredit accurate reporting. In doing so, he borrowed directly from fascist regimes’ playbooks, where truth was whatever the leader declared. Repetition of lies, denial of observable reality, and constant blame-shifting became central features of his communication style.
Whether it was falsely asserting that his inauguration crowd was the largest in history, or repeatedly declaring the 2020 election “stolen” despite over 60 failed court challenges and no evidence of widespread fraud, Trump used falsehoods to construct a political reality untethered from facts. The strategy destabilizes public trust not just in individual issues, but in the very concept of truth. Once people no longer know what to believe, they become more susceptible to manipulation — and more easily controlled.
As head of the newly created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), Elon Musk has pushed sweeping agency cuts while presenting them as anti-fraud and pro-efficiency measures. These reforms include targeting Social Security, climate research, and disability services. In televised interviews and social media posts, Musk claims that waste and fraud are rampant, citing unverified anecdotes and unverifiable data.
Critics argue that Musk’s framing intentionally misleads the public by masking ideological attacks as technocratic fixes. His business interests — ranging from space contracts to transportation projects tied to federal infrastructure — create a dangerous blend of public authority and private enrichment. The use of populist rhetoric to disguise corporate self-dealing is a classic form of gaslighting: it reframes exploitation as innovation.
Appointed as Secretary of Education, Linda McMahon has spearheaded the push to dismantle the Department of Education entirely, echoing long-held conservative goals to defund or eliminate federal involvement in public education. Her testimony before Congress emphasized “returning power to parents,” “cutting red tape,” and “reducing government overreach” — all phrases with surface appeal that obscure the dismantling of protections for marginalized students.
Civil rights advocates warn that these cuts will severely undermine federal enforcement of disability rights, Title IX protections, and racial equity in public schools. The administration’s language of “empowering local control” obscures the disproportionate impacts these changes will have on students with disabilities, LGBTQ+ students, and students of color. Critics have labeled this approach “elegant gaslighting”: a sophisticated rhetorical strategy that masks oppression as reform.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., long known for promoting vaccine misinformation, now oversees the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). His “Make America Healthy Again” campaign centers on alternative health practices, deregulation, and personal responsibility. It promotes natural supplements, detox treatments, and unregulated therapies while downplaying the importance of vaccines, public health funding, and structural health determinants.
This narrative not only undermines scientific consensus but gaslights the public into believing that chronic illness, disability, and disease are purely individual failings. It erases the structural causes of health inequities — environmental racism, lack of access to care, poverty — and replaces them with victim-blaming. By doing so, it weakens the very systems needed to protect the public from pandemics and health crises.
The administration’s attacks on Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility (DEIA) initiatives, alongside its targeting of LGBTQ+ — especially transgender — communities, are deeply rooted in gaslighting. Anti-DEIA measures are often framed as restoring merit or “fairness,” when in fact they dismantle civil rights protections. Trans people are particularly demonized under the pretense of protecting children or preserving fairness in sports, while policies banning gender-affirming care and public visibility are falsely marketed as “neutral.”
These actions erase lived experiences, deny systemic inequality, and present oppressive policies as moral or even liberatory. This is political gaslighting: redefining hate as safety, and erasing oppression by claiming it doesn’t exist.
The Trump administration has intensified scrutiny and funding cuts to universities, research, and public data infrastructure. These efforts are framed as eliminating bias, promoting neutrality, or reducing waste. In reality, they function to silence dissent, destroy knowledge production, and erase inconvenient truths — particularly around race, gender, climate, and health.
By defunding DEIA programs, targeting public health and social science research, and restricting demographic data collection, the administration gaslights the public into believing that data is partisan and expertise is suspect. These actions disorient the public and consolidate narrative control by dismantling the very tools that expose inequity and demand accountability.
The Trump administration’s actions toward lawyers, judges, and the broader legal system represent another critical axis of gaslighting. Judges who rule against the administration are labeled as corrupt or partisan, while legal institutions are portrayed as enemies of the people.
By framing legal accountability as political persecution and law enforcement as personal loyalty, the administration erodes judicial independence. Threats against judges, manipulation of the Department of Justice (DOJ), and public denigration of prosecutors delegitimize the legal process. This gaslighting tactic transforms fair legal processes into perceived witch hunts, deepening mistrust in the very institutions meant to uphold the rule of law.
Trump’s 2025 administration has extended this strategy across the entire federal government:
Trump’s executive orders aimed at reshaping library and museum content and public education present a whitewashed, sanitized version of American history.
ICE has been ordered to surveil pro-Palestinian student protesters, creating a chilling effect on academic freedom.
Censorship Mentions of climate change have been purged from federal websites. Funding for renewable energy research has been redirected or frozen.
These tactics — across health, education, environment, civil liberties, and the legal system — have a cumulative impact. They disorient the public by:
When the media, scientific community, judiciary, and educational institutions are all portrayed as untrustworthy, citizens are left without reliable anchors for truth.
Gaslighting weaponizes identity — framing critics as enemies, outsiders, or traitors. This creates a climate of fear, surveillance, and groupthink.
When people are bombarded with contradictory information, or told their suffering is their own fault, they become less likely to organize or resist. Apathy and resignation follow.
Gaslighting is not just a communications problem — it is a governance strategy. It replaces transparency with confusion, accountability with conspiracy, and solidarity with suspicion.
The Trump administration’s use of gaslighting — old in its lineage, new in its reach — should alarm anyone concerned with truth, justice, or democracy. The actions of officials like Elon Musk, Linda McMahon, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and others are not isolated eccentricities; they are part of a coordinated campaign to unmake public institutions while convincing the public they are being saved.
As history teaches us, unchecked manipulation of reality can pave the way for authoritarianism. The antidote lies in truth-telling, transparency, solidarity, and collective defense of our shared reality. In this moment, refusing to be gaslit is not just a personal act of clarity — it is a political act of resistance.
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borroso
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deslegitimar
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prestada/o
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This shows our world is like 1984 because O’Brien cheated on Winston with Big Brother
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encabezó
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This shows our world is like 1984 because American Politics are manipulating the truth, which doesn’t allow the construction of an alternate reality.
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This shows our world is like 1984 because in Oceania the party change or erased the information that are important for know more about us.
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This shows how our world is like 1984 because if you don’t support the party, you can be punish or if you have another ideas than them, also if you don’t follow their rules
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STOP: This article uses strong, emotional language and focuses on recent, controversial political events.✅
INVESTIGATE THE SOURCE: The article is from a Medium publication for the “Center for Racial and Disability Justice,” which suggests an advocacy and possibly partisan perspective.✅
FIND BETTER COVERAGE: Key claims are linked to other news and research, but you should check if reputable mainstream or centrist outlets are reporting similar events.✅
TRACE CLAIMS: The article references specific executive orders and public statements, so you can follow links and check for original sources or direct quotes.✅
EARLY JUDGMENT: This article blends evidence with opinion, so you should be careful about accepting its conclusions without checking original documents and confirming facts with outside coverage.✅
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The Center for Racial and Disability Justice (CRDJ) is an organization and academic research center dedicated to promoting the rights and voices of marginalized people, with a strong focus on the intersections of race and disability. Established at Northwestern Pritzker School of Law in 2022 by Professor Jamelia Morgan, the CRDJ aims to prevent racism and ableism from impacting individuals on a daily basis, especially disabled people of color.123589
CRDJ’s mission is to dismantle cycles of discrimination and foster an equitable, just society that values diversity. The center is guided by several principles:51
- Centering Marginalized Voices: Amplifying the experiences of disabled individuals from diverse backgrounds and recognizing unique challenges faced at the intersection of race and disability.
- Liberatory & Collective Solidarity: Working collaboratively within the university community and beyond to build mutual support and break down barriers.
- Intersectional Approach: Using intersectionality to examine and address overlapping forms of oppression resulting from both racism and ableism.
- Future-Oriented Advocacy: Actively working towards a future where barriers to opportunity are eliminated, and disabled people are recognized for their contributions to society.15
CRDJ engages in academic inquiry, public advocacy, policy analysis, and educational programming. Some of its initiatives include:
- Policy Trackers: Tools for monitoring legislation related to racial and disability justice and reparations.5
- Research and Publications: Empirical research and firsthand advocacy are used to address social justice concerns and reshape public perceptions around these issues.2
- Events and Panels: Organizing webinars, discussions, and collaborative workshops to raise awareness and provoke discourse on the intersectional challenges facing disabled people of color.75
Led by Professor Jamelia Morgan, CRDJ collaborates with experts, advocates, and peer organizations to promote its mission and influence policymaking. The center also works with national and international bodies, contributing to data justice frameworks and intersectional research practices.1027
CRDJ welcomes support through donations and encourages the public to sign up for their newsletter to stay informed of new research, events, and advocacy campaigns.3
The Center for Racial and Disability Justice represents a pioneering effort in bridging gaps between racial justice and disability rights, striving for a world where all people are treated with dignity, respect, and equity.215
1(https://www.crdjustice.org/who-we-are)
2(https://dailynorthwestern.com/2024/04/17/campus/pritzker-center-for-racial-and-disability-justice-explores-intersection-of-racial-disability-justice/)
3(https://www.law.northwestern.edu/research-faculty/racial-disability-justice/)
4(https://thearc.org/our-initiatives/criminal-justice/)
5(https://www.crdjustice.org)
6(https://www.brooklaw.edu/News-and-Events/News/2024/04/Panel-Explores-Challenges-Connections-and-Paths-Forward-for-Disability-and-Racial-Movements)
7(https://www.linkedin.com/company/center-for-racial-and-disability-justice)
8(https://www.facebook.com/NorthwesternLaw/videos/center-for-racial-and-disability-justice/805776400502738/)
9(https://news.law.northwestern.edu/videos/center-for-racial-and-disability-justice/)
10(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jDR3JKm3aUU))
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