Letters from an American, December 9, 2025 - Heather Cox Richardson
When G. Elliott Morris of Strength in Numbers asked ChatGPT to fact-check an article for him yesterday, the chatbot couldnt get its head around modern America. It told him there were multiple factual impossibilities in his article, including his statements that [t]he current Secretary of Defense is a former talk show host for Fox News, [t]he Deputy Director of the FBI used to guest-host Sean Hannitys show, and Jeanine Pirro is the U.S. District Attorney for DC.
Since none of these statements are true, it told Morris, they undermine credibility unless signposted as hyperbole, fiction, or satire.
But of course, Morriss statements were not factual impossibilities. In the United States of America under President Donald J. Trump, they are true.
Trump has always been a salesman with an instinctive understanding of the power of media. That sense helped him to rise to power in 2016 by leveraging an image Republicans had embraced since the 1980s: that the reason certain white Americans were being left behind in the modern world was not that Republican policies had transferred more than $50 trillion from the bottom 90% of Americans to the top 1%, but that lazy and undeserving Black and Brown Americans and women were taking handouts from the government rather than working.
When he got his disheartening fact-check from ChatGPT, Morris was preparing an article, published today, exploring how cable news fueled the culture war and broke U.S. politics. The article notes that most people care about and interact with the government through economic or affordability issuesprices, jobs, health care, social programs, and taxesand that most laws are also about these issues. But, he points out, political rhetoric overwhelmingly focuses on issues like race, crime, immigration, LGBTQ+ rights, and guns: the so-called culture war.
Continued
https://open.substack.com/pub/heathercoxrichardson/p/december-9-2025