In the last few weeks, a lot has gone down. Nine of the biggest law firms in America promised to spend nearly a billion dollars in “free” legal work for causes President Trump likes—right after he threatened them with harsh executive orders. Hundreds of their own lawyers quit in protest. At the same time, 18 Big Ten universities rushed to protect free speech on campus when the White House froze research money and demanded political loyalty checks.

This isn’t just another fight between Democrats and Republicans. As writer David Brooks explains, it’s one big push to break the rules that keep any president—from either party—from grabbing too much power at once. If each school, business, or law firm fights alone, Trump can pick them off one by one.

That’s a real danger, because Americans already don’t trust their government—only about one in five people think Washington usually does the right thing. That lack of trust is exactly what wannabe strongmen count on.

So far, fighting back in tiny pieces isn’t working. When five Wall Street firms caved to Trump, young lawyers from L.A. to Chicago walked out, calling it a “sell-out of the rule of law.” Harvard refused to give in, but Columbia made a quiet deal. Every time an institution chooses self-protection over teamwork, Trump’s leverage grows.

History shows how to win. Researchers Erica Chenoweth and Maria Stephan studied hundreds of non-violent movements. The ones that succeed do three things: unite a broad mix of people, use lots of different tactics, and offer a better moral vision. That’s exactly what we need now—a strong, nationwide coalition that crosses every party, profession, and hometown.

A winning movement should stand on five clear ideas:

  1. Rule of Law: Nobody—left, right, or center—is above the Constitution.
  2. Civic Power: Millions of citizens beat one person’s ego.
  3. American Pluralism: Every faith, every background—one democracy.
  4. Fair Future: Fix the inequality that helped Trumpism grow so it can’t come back.
  5. Peaceful Action: We fight with lawsuits, boycotts, and ballots—not violence.

These points translate for everyone. Conservatives hear respect for order. Progressives hear justice. Independents hear service to community.

We’re already seeing sparks. The Big Ten schools’ pact is a start. Over 800 law firms have filed briefs against Trump’s orders. Now imagine chambers of commerce funding legal fights, veterans’ groups running voter drives, and faith leaders hosting “Democracy Circles” where neighbors promise to defend fair elections.

Some people—on both sides—ask if the old “establishment” deserves a redo after missing the signs in 2016. The answer is yes, but only if those institutions fix themselves while they resist. Universities yelling about free speech must open doors to working-class kids. Law firms bragging about justice should check who makes partner. Going back to the pre-Trump status quo won’t cut it.

Short term: Stop every power grab, flood the courts with challenges, and refuse to be bullied.
Long term: Prove that powerful groups can answer to the people, not just the president.

Sound impossible? Americans have done it before—abolitionists ignoring slave-catcher laws, students staging sit-ins that helped end Jim Crow. Those wins weren’t about party politics; they were about civic courage. They showed that a nation is judged not by how much power it piles up, but by how much abuse it refuses to allow.

So let’s make one promise together: Country Before Cult. If Trump wants our institutions to kneel, we’ll help them stand—tall, united, and open to every citizen ready to link arms for the republic we all share.

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