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Home » The Rising Cost Of Dissent in America: Miles Taylor (Transcript) 

The Rising Cost Of Dissent in America: Miles Taylor (Transcript) 

Editor’s Notes: In this powerful TEDx talk, Miles Taylor, former chief of staff of the US Department of Homeland Security, details the severe personal and professional consequences he faced after publicly criticizing the Trump administration. He explores the alarming rise of political violence and self-censorship in America, noting that one in three Americans now believe political violence could be justified to put the country back on track. Taylor ultimately argues that the greatest threat to democracy is anonymity and calls on citizens to “take off the mask” and courageously speak their truths to lower the high price of dissent. (Feb 12, 2026) 

TRANSCRIPT:

Hundreds of Missed Calls

MILES TAYLOR: Not long ago, I was giving my dog a walk. His name is Martini. That wasn’t even a joke. My wife was out of town, and I left my phone inside so I could get away from the incessant buzzing and took him on a nice, long walk.

I came back inside, and I had one of those moments where your stomach sinks because I looked at my phone, and I had a lot of missed calls. My first thought was, my wife is pissed about something. It’s a lot of calls. But then I looked, and it wasn’t just a lot of calls. It was hundreds of phone calls and numbers I didn’t recognize, some of them unknown numbers, and I decided to figure out what this was.

I opened my phone, and I opened the voicemails to see if these people had left messages.

The Voicemails

“What you’re doing to President Trump is disgusting. You’re disgusting people. You’re evil, and you’re going to go down.”

“You, my friend, are a piece of shit. You are a traitor. You’re pushing for anti-Trump? You dumb motherfucker. We will squash you like a fucking peanut, bitch. You’re done. You’re done. So eat a dick and die.”

“Miles, we’re going to dock you. You’re not going to be able to walk down the street. You’re an anti-American. Leave the country. You’re not welcome here anymore. You’re anti-American. You hate your country. Get out.”

“Because you will deserve the wrath of hell, and I think you will get what’s coming to you. God willing.”

If you can believe it, those were the nice ones.

Why Washington, D.C.?

So anyway, before I get to that, let me take you back in time. Why did I end up in Washington, D.C.? Like a lot of people, after the attacks of September 11, 2001, I wanted to come to D.C. to make sure a day like that never happened again. That was going to be the full focus of my career, and I came into Washington, the lowest place you can possibly come in on the totem pole, as a young messenger on Capitol Hill, a page messenger delivering envelopes during my junior year in high school.

But despite being the lowest rung on the totem pole, I had the best desk in Washington, D.C. And I’m not joking about that. Better than the Resolute desk inside the White House, because my desk was in the back of the chamber, in the back of the Citadel of Democracy, where I had a perch to see the comings and goings of Congress in the wake of a catastrophic attack.

And if you take a look, that little red circle has a little guy inside of it, who’s me, sitting there watching the President’s State of the Union address. And I’m going to tell you what I saw in Washington in that time period. I saw unity. I was a young person who was very inspired by seeing members of Congress walk across the literal aisle to work together on legislation to protect this country. But times change. Things fade. Everything fades.

Inside the Trump Administration

Fast forward in time. I find myself in 2017 as the Chief of Staff of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. It’s not a time of unity anymore in Washington. I took that job because of the worst sales pitch anyone’s ever made for someone to join their office in history. My boss, John Kelly, said, “Miles, it’s not as bad as it looks inside the Trump administration. It is so much worse.”

And I still took that job because I understood what he meant. I understood he meant we need people who understand how government functions, how national security functions, real conservatives to come in and help steady the ship of these agencies.

I soon saw what he saw and what others saw, which is that in meetings with the President in the White House Situation Room, in the Oval Office, on Air Force One, I met a man who I had not known previously, and I found him to be reckless and impulsive at best.

MILES TAYLOR: And at worst, on days, members of Congress, cabinet secretaries walked out of the Oval Office with ashen faces, and they said things like, “The man is a threat to the fabric of our republic.” I knew there was something more serious going on.

I will tell you, I’m not going to talk about the first Trump administration, but if there was one theme, I had to spend most of my time not focused on the 250,000 men and women of the Department of Homeland Security I was responsible for helping oversee, but one man who was regularly engaged or attempting to engage in illegal acts.

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There was no deep state inside the Trump administration. There were people willing to speak truth to power and prevent the President from doing illegal things, and prevent him from implementing a lawful agenda. But I grew very frustrated, because these conversations were happening among us, a group of unelected bureaucrats, navel-gazing, wringing our hands, complaining about how unfit the President was for office.

Speaking Truth in Public

It was not our job to decide if the President was unfit for office. We would not decide if he got re-elected in a second term. That’s what you would decide. We would not go out and say it in public — but someone needed to.