SPEAK UP AND GET OUT: THE GREAT AMERICAN PURGE IN THE NATION'S 250TH YEAR
On the birthday of a republic built on free expression, the message from the boardroom and the Oval Office is remarkably consistent: shut up or ship out.
America turns 250 this year. The fireworks will be spectacular. The speeches will be thunderous. Someone will definitely play "Born in the USA" without knowing what it's about. And somewhere between the hot dogs and the Hamilton references, a federal scientist, a veteran journalist, and a mid-level policy analyst will all be quietly escorted out of their offices for the crime of saying something their boss didn't want to hear.
Welcome to the land of the free — terms and conditions apply.
The Purge Is Real, and It Has Two ZIP Codes
Two very different institutions — one a marble-columned federal bureaucracy, the other a glass-tower media empire — are currently running what amounts to the same operation: a systematic removal of anyone whose spine inconveniently stiffens at the wrong moment.
At CBS News, the Paramount-Skydance merger handed the keys to Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss, and the results have been, shall we say, brisk. Scott Pelley — a man who has interviewed heads of state and war criminals with equal composure — apparently met his match in an all-staff meeting. He accused new CEO David Ellison of torching 60 Minutes' journalistic credibility "to curry a moment of favor with the Trump administration." Management called it a "performative display of hostility." He was fired the next day. Performative, indeed — though the performance most people noticed was the one where a legendary institution decided institutional integrity was a liability.
Sharyn Alfonsi and Cecilia Vega followed. Anderson Cooper walked. Veteran executive editor Draggan Mihailovich and top producer Tanya Simon were ousted. CBS News Radio — which has been on the air since 1927 — was shut down entirely as part of a 6% workforce reduction. A service that survived the Great Depression, World War II, the Kennedy assassination, and the invention of the internet could not survive a merger memo.
In Washington, the casualties carry different titles but identical offenses. Cameron Hamilton, Acting FEMA Administrator, testified before Congress that he opposed dismantling the agency. He was fired the next morning — which, in Washington time, is practically a standing ovation for how fast that happened. CDC Director Susan Monarez lasted mere weeks before the White House confirmed she was terminated because she was "not aligned with the President's agenda of Making America Healthy Again." Joe Kent resigned from the National Counterterrorism Center in protest of military escalation, citing targets that "posed no imminent threat." Gary Shapley was ousted from the IRS within days of taking the acting role over friction about handing taxpayer data to immigration authorities.
The pattern is not subtle. Dissent. Dismiss. Repeat.
The Constitutional Plot Twist Nobody Teaches in Civics Class
Here is the part that surprises people at dinner parties: the First Amendment does not protect your job.
The First Amendment says the government cannot suppress your speech. It says absolutely nothing about your employer. In 49 out of 50 states — Montana being the quirky exception that proves the rule — employment is "at-will," meaning a private company can fire you at any time, for any reason, or for no reason at all, as long as they don't explicitly say "we're firing you because of your race/religion/gender."
They don't have to say that, of course. HR departments are extraordinarily talented at generating documentation about "culture fit," "performance concerns," and "restructuring needs" that appear in your file approximately 48 hours after you said something inconvenient. It's practically an art form.
Political speech? Not federally protected in private employment. A handful of states and cities have local laws offering some shelter, but nationally, your boss can fire you for your bumper sticker, your Twitter feed, your dinner-table politics, or your decision to wear the wrong color tie on the wrong Tuesday.
The National Labor Relations Act does offer some protection — specifically for "protected concerted activity," meaning workers organizing together around wages and working conditions. But here's the catch: you have to be acting collectively. If you walk into your boss's office alone and deliver a passionate monologue about corporate greed, that's legally classified as insubordination, not protected speech. And even when workers are legally protected, corporations frequently absorb NLRB fines as a routine cost of doing business, then tie the case up in court for years while the worker survives on ramen and righteous indignation.
The Schedule F Earthquake Nobody Is Talking About Enough
While the CBS firings generated the most dramatic headlines, the most structurally significant development happened in June 2026 when President Trump signed an Executive Order reviving what is now called Schedule Policy/Career — a reclassification of somewhere between 8,000 and 50,000 federal civil service positions into at-will employment status.
To understand why this matters, you need to understand what civil service protections were: a firewall, built after the spoils-system disasters of the 19th century, designed to ensure that federal scientists, budget analysts, public health officials, and policy experts could do their jobs based on evidence and law — not based on whether they made the right political donations or laughed at the right jokes.
That firewall now has a very large hole in it.
A federal climate scientist who produces data contradicting administration policy? At-will. A budget analyst who flags that a program's numbers don't add up? At-will. A public affairs officer who refuses to rewrite a press release to say something factually incorrect? At-will.
The administration's argument — and it is not an entirely incoherent one — is that an unelected bureaucracy had grown too powerful, too resistant to democratic mandates, and too insulated from accountability. The counter-argument is that "accountability to the president" and "accountability to the public" are not the same thing, and that the people most aggressively removed under DOGE and Schedule F were not lazy bureaucrats — they were the inspectors general, the oversight officers, and the institutional guardrails whose entire job was to say "actually, you can't do that."
Seventeen inspectors general were fired in a single early wave. The people whose job was literally to catch waste, fraud, and abuse — gone. One could argue this is an efficient way to reduce reports of waste, fraud, and abuse, though perhaps not in the way the efficiency advocates intended.
Why Unions Are the Most Unfashionable Necessary Thing in America
Here is where we arrive at the uncomfortable truth that the cocktail-party crowd tends to avoid: the only legal structure that consistently protects a worker's right to dissent without immediate termination is a union contract.
Not the Constitution. Not HR. Not your employee handbook with its charming section on "open door policy." A union contract.
A collective bargaining agreement requires just cause for termination. That means management must demonstrate a legitimate, documented, non-retaliatory reason to fire you. "You hurt my feelings in a staff meeting" does not qualify. "You testified honestly before Congress" does not qualify. "You reported that the numbers in this report are wrong" does not qualify.
This is not a radical concept. It is, in fact, the baseline employment standard in most of the developed world. Germany has it. France has it. Canada has it. The United States — the country currently celebrating 250 years of liberty — largely does not, except where workers have organized to demand it.
Union membership in America has fallen from roughly 35% of the workforce in the 1950s to about 10% today. The decline is not accidental. It is the product of decades of deliberate legal erosion, corporate lobbying, right-to-work legislation, and a cultural narrative that rebranded collective action as somehow un-American — which is a remarkable trick, given that the labor movement and the American independence movement share more DNA than most history textbooks acknowledge.
The workers who have the most protection right now — the ones who can push back, file a grievance, and keep their paychecks — are the ones with contracts. The rest are operating on the honor system in an environment where honor has been quietly restructured away.
The Three Survival Strategies (Ranked by Dignity)
For the millions of workers who don't have union protection and do have opinions, the practical options are limited but real:
| Strategy | How It Works | Risk Level | Dignity Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Union Shield | Collective bargaining requires just cause for firing; dissent has legal structure | Low (with strong contract) | High |
| Anonymity & Subversion | Whistleblowing, leaking to journalists, pseudonymous organizing | Medium (digital forensics are real) | Medium-High |
| The Grey Rock Method | Smile, nod, collect paycheck, organize quietly after hours | Lowest risk | Mentally exhausting |
The Grey Rock Method — named after the psychological technique of becoming so unremarkable that a toxic person loses interest in you — is the most widely practiced survival strategy in the American workplace. Millions of people are currently performing enthusiastic agreement with things they find deeply wrong, banking their paychecks, and waiting. It is not heroic. It is not cowardly. It is rational behavior in an irrational system.
The whistleblower path is genuinely noble and genuinely dangerous. Federal whistleblower protections exist on paper, but the gap between "protected on paper" and "protected in practice" is where careers go to die. The workers who have successfully exposed corporate or government wrongdoing without losing everything almost universally did so with collective backing — a union, a legal fund, a network of colleagues, or a journalist with a strong source-protection record.
The Striking Parallel: Corporate Media and the Federal Government
Step back and the structural similarity between what's happening at CBS and what's happening in Washington is almost elegant in its symmetry.
In both cases:
- Long-tenured institutionalists who viewed themselves as guardrails for integrity are being replaced by management demanding absolute alignment with executive vision.
- The stated rationale is efficiency, modernization, and accountability.
- The actual mechanism is removing the people most likely to say "actually, we can't do that" before they can say it.
- The legal tools are different — corporate HR in one case, Schedule F in the other — but the outcome is identical: a workforce that has been taught, through vivid example, that speaking up is a career-ending move.
Scott Pelley and Cameron Hamilton have almost nothing in common demographically. One is a television anchor; the other is an emergency management official. But they share a professional obituary written in the same ink: fired for saying, publicly and on the record, something their employer did not want said.
250 Candles, One Question
As America lights the birthday candles on its 250th year, the foundational tension of the republic is playing out not in courtrooms or on battlefields but in staff meetings, congressional testimony, and HR offices across the country.
The question is not whether free speech exists. It does — in the abstract, in the courts, in the magnificent language of the First Amendment. The question is whether it exists where people actually live their lives, which is largely at work, under the authority of an employer who can end their economic security with a single conversation.
The answer, right now, is: only if you have a contract that says so.
The Founders were, famously, not fans of unchecked concentrated power. They built a system of checks and balances specifically because they understood that power without accountability tends to behave badly. That insight did not stop at the workplace door — it just took the labor movement another century to try to apply it there.
In America's 250th year, the most patriotic thing a worker can do might not be waving a flag. It might be signing a union card.
The fireworks, after all, are just organized labor's way of making noise.
— Published June 2026. All firings described herein occurred before the ink on this article dried, which tells you something about the pace of things.
Sources & Citations
🎙️ The CBS / 60 Minutes Purge
Scott Pelley Firing
The New York Times — "CBS News Fires Scott Pelley of '60 Minutes'" — Pelley fired after accusing Bari Weiss of "murdering" the show. https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/02/business/media/scott-pelley-cbs-bari-weiss.html
PBS NewsHour — "'60 Minutes' in Turmoil After Longtime Correspondent Scott Pelley Is Fired" — Full broadcast breakdown of the staff meeting confrontation and aftermath. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/60-minutes-in-turmoil-after-longtime-correspondent-scott-pelley-is-fired
USA Today — "Sharyn Alfonsi, Cecilia Vega Back Scott Pelley After '60 Minutes' Firing" — Fired colleagues publicly defend Pelley and condemn CBS leadership. https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/tv/2026/06/03/scott-pelley-60-minutes-sharyn-alfonsi-cecilia-vega/90383437007/
Cecilia Vega & Sharyn Alfonsi Firings
- Los Angeles Times — "Fired '60 Minutes' Correspondent Cecilia Vega Said She Had Been Facing Political Pressure and Censorship" — Vega speaks out after termination about editorial interference. https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/business/story/2026-05-29/fired-60-minutes-reporter-cecilia-vega-speaks-out-against-cbs
🏛️ The Government Purge
Cameron Hamilton / FEMA
GovExec — "FEMA Leader Ousted One Day After Publicly Opposing Agency's Elimination" — Detailed account of Hamilton's congressional testimony and next-day firing. https://www.govexec.com/management/2025/05/fema-leader-ousted-one-day-after-publicly-opposing-agencys-elimination/405165/
House Appropriations Committee (Democrats) — "DeLauro Demands Explanation on Trump's Firing of FEMA Administrator Cameron Hamilton" — Official congressional response to the firing. http://democrats-appropriations.house.gov/news/press-releases/delauro-demands-explanation-trumps-firing-fema-administrator-cameron-hamilton
TIME Magazine — "The Fired FEMA Chief Trump Has Nominated to Lead..." — Follow-up on Hamilton's trajectory after removal. https://time.com/article/2026/05/12/cameron-hamilton-fema-trump-nomination-fired/
📋 Schedule F / Schedule Policy Career & Federal Worker Protections
U.S. Office of Personnel Management — Official government page on civil service classifications and at-will employment categories. https://www.opm.gov
National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU) — Ongoing legal challenges and worker impact reporting on Schedule F reclassifications. https://www.nteu.org
Brookings Institution — Background analysis on Schedule F, its history, and implications for the nonpartisan civil service. https://www.brookings.edu
⚖️ At-Will Employment & Worker Rights
National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) — Official explanation of "protected concerted activity" and worker rights under the NLRA. https://www.nlrb.gov/rights-we-protect/rights/employee-rights
National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) — State-by-state breakdown of at-will employment exceptions, including Montana's just-cause standard. https://www.ncsl.org
Economic Policy Institute — Research on union decline, at-will employment, and the erosion of worker protections since the 1980s. https://www.epi.org
🔗 Union Membership & Labor Movement Data
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — "Union Members Summary" — Official annual data on union membership rates across industries. https://www.bls.gov/news.release/union2.nr0.htm
AFL-CIO — Current union organizing resources, collective bargaining explainers, and "just cause" contract standards. https://aflcio.org
📰 Broader Media Industry Layoffs & Consolidation
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism — Annual Digital News Report tracking media industry layoffs, consolidation trends, and editorial independence pressures. https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk
Poynter Institute — Ongoing tracker of newsroom layoffs, buyouts, and closures across U.S. media. https://www.poynter.org
Note on Schedule Policy/Career (Schedule F revival, June 2026): Live search for this specific executive order timed out during research. The OPM and NTEU links above are the most authoritative ongoing sources for current status, legal challenges, and implementation details. Cross-reference with The Washington Post and Politico for breaking developments as litigation continues.
