Stephen Miller, to his credit, has lasted longer than most of the sycophants and grifters who have become famous in the Trump administration. But a big drawback to working for Donald Trump is, well, people know your face and know you work for Donald Trump. Lately, that's meant that strangers are willing to call you out in public, a practice that's become so prevalent that The Washington Post put together an entire story about the ongoing harassment of Trump's underlings.

And Miller, despite being a demonstrably insufferable person throughout his entire life, doesn't seem well-equipped to handle the negative attention. Per the Post:

One night, after Miller ordered $80 of takeout sushi from a restaurant near his apartment, a bartender followed him into the street and shouted, “Stephen!” When Miller turned around, the bartender raised both middle fingers and cursed at him, according to an account Miller has shared with White House colleagues.

Outraged, Miller threw the sushi away, he later told his colleagues.

There's a deep satisfaction in the image of Stephen Miller on the streets of D.C., furious over a stranger flipping him off, and so impotently huffy that all he can think to do is trash the food he's already paid for. It's not just satisfying because he's a wannabe fascist, but because this is evidence that public shaming works. Sean Spicer even told the Post that at the height of his notoriety, he avoided going out entirely.

It's both fair and just to hold public officials accountable for their public actions, especially when those actions are based on white supremacist wet dreams of half-baked ethnic cleansing. For any Trump official who doesn't want to live this way, there is an obvious solution: Don't work for, support, or enable someone who wants to indiscriminately lock up immigrant families. That might be hard for Miller in particular, since he's an anti-immigrant zealot who was a major architect of the policies in the first place. But he doesn't get to make that official policy and be comfortably heckle-free in public. It's an either/or situation and Miller made his choice.