On Offense: Conversations with Kris Goldsmith

Kristofer Goldsmith

On Offense: Conversations with Kris Goldsmith features raw, urgent, and unfiltered conversations about the fight against fascism in America. Hosted by Kris Goldsmith — combat veteran, antifascist investigator, and founder of Task Force Butler and Veterans Fighting Fascism — this series brings you behind the scenes of the struggle to defend democracy from the radical right. These episodes include Substack Live interviews, collaborative deep dives, and audio dispatches that explore domestic extremism, authoritarian threats, and the growing grassroots resistance. You'll also hear voices from the broader antifascist movement, including co-hosts of the Find Out podcast — a sharp, unapologetic roundtable of veteran and activist creators pushing back against disinformation and hate. Whether you're a veteran, researcher, organizer, or concerned citizen, this feed will give you the context and clarity to join the fight — wherever you are. Because fighting fascism requires more than silence. onoffense.substack.com

  1. 23 OCT

    Trump's VA Is Lying About Mental Health Care Cuts. I Know Because Whistleblowers Came to Me.

    The Department of Veterans Affairs is lying to the American public about its own mental health care policies. Right now, veterans across the country are being cut off from life-saving therapy — not because of clinical decisions, but because of bureaucratic mandates that are forcing VA doctors’ hands. The VA says there are “no limits” on how many appointments a veteran can have. That is a lie. I know it’s a lie because whistleblowers inside the system brought me the proof. Since I launched On Offense 9 months ago, VA mental health professionals — psychologists, social workers, psychiatrists — have been reaching out to me from across the country. They told me about an internal policy shift that arbitrarily limits how many therapy sessions veterans can access, no matter how severe their PTSD, depression, or suicidality may be. To be clear — this policy of cutting off veterans from needed mental health care began under previous administrations, including Trump’s first term and Biden’s. But since January 2025, under Trump and Secretary Doug Collins, the policy has expanded — and so has the enforcement. Now, CNN has published a national story confirming what I’ve been warning about for months. The VA’s response? Have their chief propagandist, Pete Kasperowicz — a former politics editor at Fox News — gaslight the public. Deny everything. Pretend the whistleblowers and their evidence don’t exist. Thanks for reading On Offense with Kris Goldsmith! This post is public so feel free to share it. The Whistleblowers’ Warnings Back in June, I wrote about the first wave of whistleblowers who came forward to warn that veterans were being cut off from care. Doctors from the very VA hospital that saved my life and facilitated the toughest part of my recovery described being pressured to end therapy with patients who still needed it. They shared internal emails from supervisors warning that if they didn’t follow the new limits, this would be reflected in their performance evaluations, and ultimately their jobs could be at risk. Since that story went live, even more whistleblowers have reached out. Providers from additional VA hospitals shared documents showing the same pattern. Veterans who had been in crisis told me how their therapy was abruptly ended, even when those veterans’ VA records showed a history of suicide attempts. Clinicians offered proof: screenshots, emails, and policy memos on VA hospitals’ official letterhead. But here’s the problem — those documents could be used to identify who spoke up. And this Trump-run VA has made it clear: if you speak out, your career is over. That’s why I couldn’t publish the full receipts myself. Instead, I handed these documents, whistleblowers, and sources to a national news outlet. Patients Are Being Cut Off The CNN investigation confirmed what whistleblowers told me: the VA is enforcing strict limits on how many one-on-one therapy sessions a veteran can receive. For some, that cap is as low as four sessions. Others might get 8 or 12. But the pattern is clear: the VA is pushing providers to end care early, no matter what their professional judgment says. A Marine veteran named Michael told CNN that after finally finding a therapist he trusted — someone who helped him survive addiction and multiple suicide attempts — his therapy was suddenly cut off. He described it as being “thrown away like yesterday’s trash.” Clinicians said the same thing: they’re being ordered to carry out policies they know are harmful. One provider told CNN, as several told me, that ending therapy felt like a moral injury. Another said they felt like a perpetrator of trauma, forced to retraumatize patients by abandoning them. The Excuse of “Episodic Care” The VA isn’t admitting what it’s doing. But if you dig into the internal memos, the justification for these limits on therapy is rooted in a treatment model called “episodic care.” On paper, this model uses metrics to track outcomes and set treatment durations. In theory, it’s supposed to make care more efficient. Veteran patients are screened for things like PTSD, depression, and insomnia, before, during, and after treatment. They receive a score based on the severity, frequency, and life-altering impact of symptoms. For those whose symptoms improve significantly between screenings, it may be appropriate to reduce the frequency or duration of their therapy sessions — or it may be clinically appropriate for them to conclude therapy altogether. But that’s not what’s happening here. In practice, a shift to “episodic care” is being used as a cost-cutting weapon that ignores the clinical realities of trauma recovery. Under this model, veterans get slotted into a pre-defined number of therapy sessions with the expectation that they’ll be “better” by the end. But if they’re not? If they relapse? If their trauma flares up or if ending therapy triggers another crisis? The model doesn’t account for that. Because it’s not about care. It’s about compliance. Providers have told me that how well a patient is doing — or how badly they’re doing after being cut off — doesn’t factor into whether they get more sessions. The VA’s message is clear: meet the quota, or move on. They’ve taken an evidence-based way to make mental health care more efficient and turned it into metrics-based rationing. The Real Reason: A Manufactured Scarcity Model If you’re wondering why the VA is pushing episodic care so aggressively — here’s the real answer: the VA doesn’t have enough mental health professionals to treat every veteran who needs care for as long as they need it. That’s not because there’s a shortage of clinicians in America. It’s because Trump and his Republican allies have spent years deliberately gutting the VA’s workforce, and sabotaging Democrats’ efforts to staff up and fund the department. One of Trump’s first priorities after returning to power was to empower Elon Musk — and the meme-coin clowns he installed to oversee VA staffing like it’s a crypto startup — to fire 80,000 VA employees. That’s not a typo. Eighty thousand public servants — they wanted them gone, with no plan for who to cut or where. Clinical staff, support staff, schedulers, social workers. Thanks to public pressure (in part thanks to this readership) that number was reduced to just north of 30,000. The loss of those VA employees — many pushed out with draconian policies designed to make the VA a miserable place to work — has still had a devastating effect that we’re just beginning to see the symptoms of. Entire layers of the VA’s capacity were wiped out. And that’s just the beginning. At the same time, Trump’s allies in the Republican-controlled Congress are draining billions of dollars from the VA healthcare system and rerouting that money to for-profit private providers. These contractors have virtually no oversight, no incentive to retain complex or high-risk patients, and no commitment to the long-term health of veterans. Coincidentally, these corporations just happen to be very generous when it comes to supporting Republicans’ political campaigns. What we’re seeing now is the logical result of those attacks: a health system that’s being forced to operate on a scarcity model. One that prioritizes valuable data extraction from veterans over patient care and sustained, positive, long-term health outcomes. One that pushes veterans through a revolving door of treatment “episodes” rather than building long-term therapeutic relationships. One that treats clinicians like bureaucrats and veterans like burdens. This is all about making the VA fail — so Republicans can privatize it. The VA’s Public Lies When CNN reached Secretary Collins’ spokesperson at the VA, he issued a blanket denial. Kasperowicz claimed there are “no limits” on mental health care. They said no providers are being disciplined. They pretended the documents CNN reviewed — the same ones whistleblowers gave me — don’t exist. That lie is dangerous. It’s dangerous because it tells veterans who are suffering that the system hasn’t changed — when it has. The VA, despite Republicans’ repeated sabotage, has improved drastically since I first got care there 18 years ago. Kasperowicz’s lie is dangerous because it tries to tell whistleblowers that speaking out is pointless. And it tells his fellow political appointees at the top of the VA that they can get away with anything, even when the truth is staring them in the face. It’s clear that the VA is trying to bait us into dumping sensitive evidence into the public and putting our sources at risk. We won’t betray the trust of these patriots who work at the VA, and we will keep telling their stories in safe ways that keeps the pressure where it belongs: on the Trump Administration, Secretary Doug Collins, and the political hacks and propagandists that they’ve installed throughout the VA system. Why This Matters Now This isn’t just a story about health care. It’s a story about what happens when authoritarianism takes control of the largest integrated health system in the country. They cut care, slash benefits, and gaslight both patients and the public, and then try to leverage media stories to erode trust in the very same institution they’re leading, blaming it for their failures. Under Donald Trump and Secretary Doug Collins, the VA is no longer being run in the best interest of veterans. It’s being run like a propaganda machine. Professional ethics are being thrown out the window. Civil servants are being silenced. Healthcare policies are being dictated by political operatives, not medical professionals. And when those policies hurt people — when veterans are cut off from life-saving care — Trump and Collins’ stooges in the VA press shop lie about it. We’re seeing this weaponization and sabota

    4 min
  2. 19 SEPT

    I Am an Antifascist Veteran. Well, I Guess That Makes Me a “Terrorist” Now?

    Show Notes: President Trump has announced his intent to designate “Antifa” as a terrorist organization. In this episode, I break down what that means, why it’s happening now, and the danger it poses to ordinary Americans who dare to dissent. We look at how Trump and JD Vance are exploiting the assassination of Charlie Kirk to criminalize critics, silence institutions, and celebrate political violence. I share how Veterans Fighting Fascism and Task Force Butler are responding—by continuing to work with communities and law enforcement to prevent hate crimes and build resilience. Antifascism isn’t terrorism—it’s patriotism. It’s the tradition of the Greatest Generation, and the commitment of every American willing to defend democracy at home. In this episode: -Trump’s designation of “Antifa” as terrorism -The authoritarian playbook at work -The gutting of federal prevention programs -Pardons for insurrectionists and glorification of political violence -The cost of dissent in 2025 America -How to organize locally through the Antifascist Book ClubLinks & Resources: Subscribe to On Offense: https://onoffense.substack.com/p/antifa-veteran-terrorist Veterans Fighting Fascism merch: https://taskforcebutler.myshopify.com/collections/all-items Start an Antifascist Book Club: https://www.veteransfightingfascism.org/antifascist-book-club Get full access to On Offense with Kris Goldsmith at onoffense.substack.com/subscribe

    6 min
  3. 11 SEPT

    Charlie Kirk’s Assassination and the Cycle of Political Violence

    Charlie Kirk was assassinated yesterday in front of a crowd of college students. The images and reports are shocking, and the gravity of the moment is impossible to overstate. A prominent American political figure was gunned down on stage, and the country is going to be worse off for it. Let me be clear from the start: I am not celebrating what happened, nor am I excusing or condoning it. Political assassination is a tragedy, no matter who the target is. But refusing to look squarely at the meaning of this moment would be its own kind of dishonesty. My responsibility—as a veteran, as someone who has studied extremist movements for years, and as someone committed to defending democracy—is to help make sense of it. This assassination is not an isolated event. It is part of a dangerous political trajectory that Kirk himself helped accelerate: the mainstreaming of conspiracy theories, the normalization of political violence, and the transformation of opponents into enemies. Donald Trump and the MAGA movement have built their power on these same foundations. Kirk was one of their most important propagandists, and his death will not end the movement’s violent trajectory. If anything, it will deepen and intensify it. Understanding that reality is the first step in preparing ourselves for what comes next. On Offense with Kris Goldsmith is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Charlie Kirk’s Legacy of Political Violence Charlie Kirk was not just a “conservative commentator” as many are saying today on television news. He was one of the most influential propagandists of the MAGA movement, and his work directly fueled political radicalization and violence in this country. He wasn’t a passive participant in the rise of American extremism—he was an architect of it. Kirk and his organization, Turning Point USA, spent years mainstreaming hate, disinformation, and the demonization of political opponents. He played a central role in shifting American politics toward targeting vulnerable communities—particularly LGBTQ people, immigrants, and people of color—and in teaching a generation of young white men to see violence as acceptable, even patriotic. He gave them a worldview where political opponents were enemies, and enemies were disposable. Kirk relentlessly promoted the conspiracy theories about the 2020 election that radicalized countless Americans and culminated in the January 6 insurrection, when MAGA supporters brutally assaulted police officers for hours in an attempt to overturn democracy. He bragged on social media about bussing hundreds—if not thousands—of insurrectionists to Washington that day, before cowardly deleting the evidence. He was never held accountable for this role in one of the darkest days in American history. Kirk once publicly condemned the far-right leaders who pushed the “Great Replacement” conspiracy theory, and those who promoted it—like the proudly racist, anti-Jewish, and misogynistic Nick Fuentes—acknowledging its dangers. But when he realized its value as a political weapon, he embraced and amplified it. He mainstreamed a genocidal lie that has inspired mass shooters to kill Jews, immigrants, and people of color in cities across America. And it is telling that Kirk’s final words were dedicated to spreading hate against trans people—a community already living under the constant threat of violence. Even in his last moments, he chose not to call for peace or unity, but to weaponize lies that put more lives at risk. This is Charlie Kirk’s legacy: he created the conditions for political violence, profited from it, and normalized it. His assassination does not erase that record—it cements it. History must remember him not as a victim, but as one of the chief authors of the violent era we now face. The Cycle of Retaliation Charlie Kirk’s assassination will not end the politics of hate that he fueled. It will accelerate them. Authoritarian movements thrive on martyrs, and Kirk will be transformed into one of their most powerful symbols. Donald Trump and the MAGA movement are already seizing this moment to justify repression. Within hours, Trump blamed the “radical left” for Kirk’s killing and vowed to “find each and every one of those who contributed to this atrocity.” His allies in Congress and right-wing media are echoing the call, with some openly demanding executions and promising vengeance. This is the authoritarian playbook: take a figure who spent years stoking hatred and violence, and then, when they are struck down, recast them as a victim and a saint. That martyrdom becomes a recruiting tool, a justification for crackdowns, and a rallying cry for revenge. I want to emphasize that this has not been confirmed by the FBI as of the time of this writing, but the Wall Street Journal wrote that the rifle casings recovered with the suspected murder weapon carried markings tied to “transgender and antifascist ideology.” Whether that detail is real or distorted, it will be weaponized by Trump and his propagandists. They will use it as supposed proof that trans people, antifascists, and anyone who stands against fascism are violent threats to the nation. That narrative will justify both state repression and vigilante violence aimed squarely at vulnerable communities—and at those of us who have made a public stand against fascism. We should be clear-eyed about what comes next. Trump and his allies will frame Kirk’s assassination as proof that all of their enemies—liberals, progressives, antifascists, journalists, queer and trans people—are dangerous, violent, and illegitimate. They will use this moment to call for new powers, new crackdowns, and new campaigns of intimidation. And they will do so with the full weight of the executive branch behind them. This is not a passing crisis. It is the new normal. Authoritarian movements build power by escalating violence, then using the chaos as justification for more power. Kirk’s death will become another accelerant in this cycle of retaliation. The danger ahead is not hypothetical—it is imminent. What This Means for Us Trump and MAGA leaders are already promising vengeance, signaling they will use this moment to justify new crackdowns against their perceived enemies. That includes antifascists, LGBTQ communities, immigrants, journalists, and anyone who stands in their way. It is natural to feel fear or despair in a moment like this. But those emotions are not weaknesses—they are proof that you still care, that you still have a heart. What matters is what we do with them. Authoritarianism thrives when people give up. It withers when people organize. Those of us who carry privilege have a responsibility to use it. As a white, male Army veteran, I can safely engage with law enforcement in ways that others cannot. That privilege comes with an obligation: to defend communities that are more vulnerable, especially those who have been targeted again and again by the far right. Every person who has that kind of privilege must recognize their duty to act. We’ve seen examples of effective resistance earlier this week. In Chicago, community members, local officials, and everyday citizens came together to block attempts to bring in outside troops. They didn’t need weapons or violence to do it—they needed solidarity and persistence. That model shows us the power of collective action, even in the face of overwhelming threats. The choice before us is stark: sit back and allow repression to escalate, or organize locally to protect one another. Fear is not the end point—it is the starting point for courage. And courage is exactly what this moment demands. The Path Forward: Organize Locally If Kirk’s assassination signals anything, it’s that the United States is entering a period of even greater volatility and repression. The response from Trump and MAGA will be to weaponize fear and expand authoritarian power. Our response must be to strengthen communities, build resilience, and organize. The most accessible entry point is to start locally. Antifascist Book Clubs are one of the simplest and most powerful ways to begin. They bring people together to learn history, understand the authoritarian playbook, and build the trust that sustains real resistance. Veterans Fighting Fascism offers a free guide that walks you through how to start one in your neighborhood. These clubs are not just about reading—they are about forging the bonds that will carry us through hard times. Beyond that, communities can and must develop practical tools of defense and solidarity: rapid response networks to counter fascist organizing, coalitions to pressure local officials, and systems of mutual aid to protect the most vulnerable. Every act of local resistance undermines the authoritarian strategy of fear. Task Force Butler’s Community Response Guide and Street Teams Guide were designed to help people safely gather intelligence and evidence on fascist street gangs—groups that will only continue to grow as a threat. But the same skillset applies when government turns its power inward. The ability to document, verify, and expose excesses by masked government thugs is just as important as exposing neo-Nazis in the streets. These guides give communities the tools to do both, lawfully and effectively. This is how we prepare. This is how we fight back. Not as individuals standing alone, but as communities who refuse to be broken. Final Thoughts History is clear: authoritarianism is not invincible. Fascist movements rise by exploiting fear and division, but they can be stopped when ordinary people refuse to surrender to hopelessness. The United States has faced moments of violence, repression, and crisis before. Each time, survival has depended not on powerful leaders, but on communities who organized to defend one another and to deman

    6 min

About

On Offense: Conversations with Kris Goldsmith features raw, urgent, and unfiltered conversations about the fight against fascism in America. Hosted by Kris Goldsmith — combat veteran, antifascist investigator, and founder of Task Force Butler and Veterans Fighting Fascism — this series brings you behind the scenes of the struggle to defend democracy from the radical right. These episodes include Substack Live interviews, collaborative deep dives, and audio dispatches that explore domestic extremism, authoritarian threats, and the growing grassroots resistance. You'll also hear voices from the broader antifascist movement, including co-hosts of the Find Out podcast — a sharp, unapologetic roundtable of veteran and activist creators pushing back against disinformation and hate. Whether you're a veteran, researcher, organizer, or concerned citizen, this feed will give you the context and clarity to join the fight — wherever you are. Because fighting fascism requires more than silence. onoffense.substack.com

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