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.
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.
So I decided I would go say what we were talking about in private, in public.
Now, I did that at first anonymously, as many of you know. And I put on that mask not because I was afraid to stand by my opinions, but because I’m a student of history, and my favorite book is a compendium of essays called The Federalist Papers. Total bestseller. All the authors are dead.
And the Founding Fathers wrote anonymous essays to sell the American public on the Constitution, not because they were scared to associate themselves with those words, but because they knew it would create a spectacle, and it would draw attention, and to them it was the most important issue of their time to get the American people to pay attention to this conversation. I did the same thing.
I’m not comparing myself to those founders, but I used the same device, and it worked. You paid attention. We started a national conversation about how the president’s own lieutenants didn’t think he was fit for office. That was an important conversation to have, whether you agreed with us or didn’t agree with us.
The President’s Response
One person also noticed. And in a seven-letter, all-caps tweet, he said, “TREASON?” And I was grateful that there was a question mark, because treason is punishable by death in the United States. So at least if there was a question, I had a chance.
The president of the United States subsequently said he wanted the author found and turned in for national security reasons. But as I later found out, the White House gave up the search because lawyers in the White House said this article was First Amendment-protected speech. “We can’t pursue this person. It’s not treason. We’re not going to arrest them.”
Taking Off the Mask
But that was not enough for me. In 2020, I felt like I needed to take off the mask, because behind the mask, I was sending the signal that it was okay to sit in the dark and put your opinions out there and not take accountability. Before that election, I needed to go out there and tell you the specific things that I saw to buttress those claims I made in that piece and let you make up your damn minds about whether this guy deserved to be reelected.
Once again, he noticed. We’ll get to that in a second. And he said at campaign rallies, “Bad things are going to happen to Miles Taylor.” And he was right. They did. His supporters made sure of it.
As a consequence of his rhetoric, as a consequence of accusing me of treason, I had to leave my home on Capitol Hill. I lost my job that I had taken in the private sector after I left the administration. I was fired from that job. I lost my life savings spending it on lawyers, my security, friends.
And on election night 2020, I found myself in a safe house in Northern Virginia under armed guard with a pistol under my pillow because so many of my fellow Americans believed I should die for criticizing the president of the United States.
Fast forward to April 9th of this year. Of course, Donald Trump lost that election in 2020. He won. He came back to power. And on that day, I was out and about again with Martini, which means you know something bad is going to happen. He was a dirty martini. I had to take him to the groomers. We got him cleaned. I came home and I got a message from a journalist who said, “You need to turn on the news. The president of the United States is talking about you in the Oval Office.”
And I pulled it up on my phone. And there was Donald Trump declaring not that I might be guilty of treason. The question mark was gone. He told the American people and the world that he believed I was guilty of the highest crime contemplated in the United States Constitution. A reminder — a crime punishable by death.
A Presidential Accusation — and What It Means
And as legal scholars later told me, it was the first time in 249 years of the American Republic that a president of the United States has issued an executive order to investigate one of his critics for First Amendment protected speech.
Now you would be right to ask a question. If treason is tantamount to murder, why am I standing here right now? Why am I not in handcuffs? Why am I not in a jail cell? And whether you agree with me or not, I will tell you the answer.
The answer is because the U.S. justice system has not caught up to the president’s view that criticism of a president is subversive. That criticism should be criminalized. That you need a permission slip to criticize the president. The justice system hasn’t caught up to that. Yet.
When the Followers Take Notice
But you know who did? The same people before that followed his dog whistles. They were paying attention.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: “Miles Taylor, what the fuck are you thinking going against Trump, you and your cronies? I really don’t appreciate you putting out garbage. Do you want to be looking at defamation of character, et cetera, et cetera, putting out lies? Because everybody’s on it and on you. Your names are going to go viral because you are treasonous ilk to our country. You are what is wrong with America. You are a piece of shit. We don’t forgive treason.”
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: “Miles, just want to let you know that your effort to try and defeat the GOAT, the greatest president of all time, is not going to work. You guys poked the bear. You woke the sleeping giant. We’re coming, my man.”
MILES TAYLOR: These folks are not getting invited to Thanksgiving. But I will tell you, joking aside, those consequences were real.
The Real Cost: Family, livelihood, and Safety
Everything that we had rebuilt since 2020, when our lives were detonated, was kicked over again because of all of this. The address of our home that we had moved to to protect my family was doxed. Our phone numbers were doxed. My wife asked me, “Do we need to sell the house to be able to pay for the legal fees?” The business that I had built in the wake of this that cut checks for 50 people was destroyed, and those 50 people no longer received paychecks.
But the hardest for me, as a father and a husband, was watching not just me get death threats — my wife be threatened, my one-year-old daughter threatened and her image posted on the internet. That’s not okay. And it forced us to take legal action against people we’ve never met in this country.
Even today, I will tell you the truth. My security advisor said he did not want me to come speak to you today. And we know why. Because of the environment we are in. But think about that for a second.
The irony that a speech about free speech can’t be given in the land of the free without fear of reprisal.
## What’s Happening to Me Is Happening to Everyone
MILES TAYLOR: What’s so remarkable about my experience and the reason I shared it with you today is that it is unremarkable now. Because what has happened to me is happening from people at the member of Congress level all the way down to state representatives and parks and recreation directors and you name it in this country. Poll workers who are threatened with crowdsourced violence. Members of Congress who are scared to hold town halls because of their constituents on the left and on the right.
I’m going to give you a data point about this. 10X. The year Donald Trump was elected president, there were a thousand death threats a year to members of Congress. A thousand violent threats. By the time he left office, that had gone up tenfold to 10,000 death threats a year. And this is roughly where the number has hovered. And it is indicative of what we are seeing in other parts of our society.
But I didn’t need the data points to know this. I’ll tell you what my data point was. My data point was a desk.
## A Desk at the Last Line of Defense
On January 6, 2021, you all know what happened. What you probably don’t know is that a desk was slid from the corner of the House chamber. The desk I had sat at as a congressional page in a Washington unified against a foreign enemy. And it was slid in front of the door and it was the last line of defense against a violent mob of insurrectionists. I get chills still talking about that because of how quickly our world changed in that time period.
Now we know a lot of scary things have happened recently. We saw the assassination of a top political commentator on the right. Just last week the top Democrat in Congress had an assassination plot foiled against him. And so it begs the question — who is responsible for the price of dissent being so high in America? Why are people fearing for their lives to speak their political opinions?
## The Uncomfortable Answer
If you think my answer is Donald Trump, you would be wrong. Unfortunately, my answer is you, or some of you.
NPR just came out with a survey the other week that showed one in three — one in three Americans now believe that political violence would be justified to put the country back on track. I’m going to give you another one in three. One in three Americans own a cat, a feline. Unfortunately, we had five of them in my household. Thanks, dad.
One in three. So statistically, if you come visit the United States and you shake someone’s hand on the subway, they are just as likely to possess a cat as they are to possess the view that they should potentially kill their fellow Americans to put the country back on track. Think about that.
## It’s Not Just One Side
Now, I want to ask you a question. Which political affiliation do you think is more likely to hold this view? Is it the Democrats? Is it the Republicans? You’re all wrong. It’s Democrats and Republicans in equal measure, statistically.
Now, you might be sitting there saying, “Miles, but I’m not one of those one-third. I’m not one of those.” I didn’t call your phone that day. At least, I don’t think any of you did. And again, statistically, you’re probably right.
You probably fit into this category because a recent survey found that two out of three Americans are now actively admitting to self-censoring their views out of fear of reprisal. It’s not just people inside the Beltway. It’s you. We’re all doing it. We’re all guilty of it.
The same survey found that the vast majority of Americans agree in private on almost all the controversial issues in our society. Immigration, abortion, climate change, you name it. The survey found majorities agree on those issues, but they’re scared to say it, including they’re afraid to repudiate political violence.
So, who’s responsible for the price of dissent being so high in this country? It’s not Donald Trump.
The Real Threat to Democracy
MILES TAYLOR: It’s not even the one-third of Americans who believe we might have to use political violence against one another. It’s the two-thirds. In my opinion, the greatest threat to democracy today is anonymity, and I understand that that’s ironic coming from me. I get it. It’s anonymity. We are wearing our figurative masks. We are scared to tell the truth, and you know what? When we’re scared to tell the truth, intimidation works. It works very, very well.
The Economics of Dissent
And I’m going to close by saying this. The question is, how do we fix it then? I’m going to give you an economics lesson. Oh, God, this talk just got awful. If you remember supply and demand curves, in any marketplace, when supply and demand meet, that’s what determines the price, okay? If as many people want pencils as there are pencils out there, boop, that’s the price. I don’t know, $1.50 a pencil.
If the price of dissent in this country is high today, how do you lower it? Economics teaches you there are only two ways. That’s it. There’s two ways to lower that price. One, you could decrease demand. You decrease demand for pencils. We don’t want them anymore. We’re using pens. The price will go down, but when it comes to dissent and truth and debate in this country, if you believe in what the founders said about America, you don’t want to do that. We don’t want to decrease the demand for truth and debate and the possibility of reaching a court on important issues.
So the only way to lower the price in any marketplace is to increase the supply. That is you. You are the good in that marketplace. We need more dissent. We need people unafraid to step forward and speak the truth.
Take Off the Mask
And so I will close by just saying this. There’s a lot of scary things happening right now in this country. A lot of scary things. And I understand the inclination to ask, what is going on here? But before you answer that question, I want you to ask yourself and the people around you another question. Am I anonymous still? Because if the answer is yes to that, then you also know the solution. It’s within your control. And that solution is it’s time to take off the mask. Thank you.
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