 
Something is going on.
Top Trump officials are moving onto military bases to get away from Left-wing protestors, aka, violent extremists.
The NG are preparing a “quick reaction force” for every state, and Trump officials are moving on base.
Major public backlash is coming, and Trump is getting all his ducks in a row beforehand. Trump and his administration have been pretty openly telling us they are going to deploy the US MIL to cities nationwide to stop crime, deport the illegals, and lock up all the Antifa terrorists.
Sounds like the Insurrection Act is coming and members of the Trump admin are moving into maximum security before the hammer drops.
Something is going on.
Top Trump officials are moving onto military bases to get away from Left-wing protestors, aka, violent extremists.
The NG are preparing a “quick reaction force” for every state, and Trump officials are moving on base.
Major public backlash is coming,… pic.twitter.com/vfPfv9rCjN
— Clandestine (@WarClandestine) October 30, 2025
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Top Trump Officials Are Moving Onto Military Bases
by Michael Scherer, Missy Ryan and Ashley Parker at The Atlantic
Stephen Miller, Marco Rubio, Kristi Noem, and others have taken over homes that until recently housed senior officers.
The former White House adviser Katie Miller—mother of three young children, and wife of the presidential right-hand man Stephen—walked out of her front door one Thursday morning last month and was confronted by a woman she did not know. When she told this story on Fox News, she described the encounter as a protest that crossed a line. The stranger had told Miller: “I’m watching you,” she said. This was the day after Charlie Kirk’s assassination. It also wasn’t anything new.
For weeks before Kirk’s death, activists had been protesting the Millers’ presence in north Arlington, Virginia. Someone had put up wanted posters in their neighborhood with their home address, denouncing Stephen as a Nazi who had committed “crimes against humanity.” A group called Arlington Neighbors United for Humanity warned in an Instagram post: “Your efforts to dismantle our democracy and destroy our social safety net will not be tolerated here.” The local protest became a backdrop to the Trump administration’s response to Kirk’s killing. When Miller, the architect of that response who is known for his inflammatory political rhetoric, announced a legal crackdown on liberal groups, he singled out the tactics that had victimized his family—what he called “organized campaigns of dehumanization, vilification, posting peoples’ addresses.”
Stephen Miller soon joined a growing list of senior Trump-administration political appointees—at least six by our count—living in Washington-area military housing, where they are shielded not just from potential violence but also from protest. It is an ominous marker of the nation’s polarization, to which the Trump administration has itself contributed, that some of those top public servants have felt a need to separate themselves from the public. These civilian officials can now depend on the U.S. military to augment their personal security. But so many have made the move that they are now straining the availability of housing for the nation’s top uniformed officers.
Kristi Noem, the Homeland Security secretary, moved out of her D.C. apartment building and into the home designated for the Coast Guard commandant on Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling,…
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