Aaron had a relatively light day on Bluesky, sharing a handful of reposts across a few distinct topics.
On the political resistance front, Aaron reposted a pointed observation about the critique of the "No Kings" campaign — that if Democrats truly face a resource disadvantage so severe that grassroots organizing is a distraction, then "No Kings" isn't the real problem. He also reposted Steve Vladeck's analysis of the Supreme Court's behavior in the Louisiana and Alabama redistricting cases, flagging the argument that the Court's inconsistent application of the Purcell doctrine has no coherent legal explanation beyond partisan politics.
Aaron also engaged with several stories touching on authoritarianism and civil liberties. He reposted coverage of the Trump administration's decision to ban statistical noise-adding techniques used to protect respondent privacy in the 2030 Census. He amplified a comparison between the current administration and Nazi Germany's 1936 Olympics PR strategy, prompted by news that award-winning Somali referee Omar Artan was denied entry to the U.S. ahead of the World Cup. He also reposted a piece on the Platner case and noted an observation about the growing and increasingly open Nazi presence in World War II gaming communities on Steam.