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Trump Dictatorship and All Things Politics

Current 'conservatives' seem to be of the opinion that if a migrant or other visitor in our country is accused of anything Donald has the right to beat them to death in the street, though I think they take more joy in this prolonged execution.

Truly a pathetic lack of morals.
Ya all of a sudden the penalty for trespassing is the same as for committing murder except even worse because you get shipped to a country you have never even been to for serving your sentence for basically existing on land that yesterday you were ok to exist on but today existing on that land means you get sent to a horrible maximum security prison in another country that you have never been to.
It's insane.

This case is even more insane. This kid was allowed protected status in 2019 (trump was president) and has committed no crimes while here (or in his previous country either) and has no tattoos or gang affiliations.
He has court cases pending regarding citizenship.
He is doing everything the right way.

Then suddenly one day some dudes show up and one of the dudes even says "this isn't the guy we are after" and the other dude says "let's take him anyway" and now he is in a prison in El Salvador where he has never even been before.

So ****ed up.
 
Disappearing those deemed “undesirable” by the ruling leader and/or party violating the law and justifying such illegal activity as being, “the will of the people” is the defining characteristic of fascism. Some of you are revealing your own degenerate selves. Wanna know whose side you’d be in Pinchocet’s Chile or Nazi Germany? We’re seeing it. The funny thing is, you don’t think this can happen to you and your tribe? As if you’ll always be the one wearing the boot?
And remember, Auschwitz wasn't located in Germany. It was in Poland.
 
Ya all of a sudden the penalty for trespassing is the same as for committing murder except even worse because you get shipped to a country you have never even been to for serving your sentence for basically existing on land that yesterday you were ok to exist on but today existing on that land means you get sent to a horrible maximum security prison in another country that you have never been to.
It's insane.

This case is even more insane. This kid was allowed protected status in 2019 (trump was president) and has committed no crimes while here (or in his previous country either) and has no tattoos or gang affiliations.
He has court cases pending regarding citizenship.
He is doing everything the right way.

Then suddenly one day some dudes show up and one of the dudes even says "this isn't the guy we are after" and the other dude says "let's take him anyway" and now he is in a prison in El Salvador where he has never even been before.

So ****ed up.
Bingo

What happened to proportionality? If you think this country should have zero brown asylum seekers or undocumented immigrants? Fine. I disagree with it. And it’s certainly at odds with most western democracies. But why are we deporting them to a gulag in a country they haven’t even been to? Punishments need to fit the “crime.” The way we’re treating these people is something like the worst regimes in the last few hundred years.

On top of all of this, how do we know these people are what Donald says they are? Donald lies all the time. This is why due process exists. And this is why you don’t deport people to gulags in other countries.

And while this might give the worst MAGAs boners, it’s not what the majority of this country wants.
 
There is this thing called Google that you can type your questions into and get answers.
Sorry, your posts and views are so stupid. The separation of powers is part of a system of check and balances to prevent any branch of having too much power. In this case the Executive. Second, facilitating the release of someone, who was wrongfully deported in the first place (had legal protection) and then imprisoned in a foreign country is part US foreign diplomacy toolbox. It does it all the time. But you are claiming the Judiciary is forcing the Executive to abduct someone? Or even invading the country?. Don't be this dumb. The Executive made a mistake and it has all the tools to fix it (tariffs maybe...s/) if they want to (obviously they don't as it will put in question -even more- its deportation policy, so Garcia is paying the price).
 
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Correct. What a foreign sovereign nation does to their own citizen is a foreign affair. What El Salvador does or does not do with El Salvadorian nationals is not within the purview of a lower court judge in the United States. A judge here in the United States can rule the deportation was illegal and levy a sanction, such as a fine, but is constitutionally barred from issuing court orders that direct foreign affairs. Doing so would "exceed the District Court’s authority" as SCOTUS succinctly put it. That a lower court judge in the United States is clearly trying to usurp power beyond the limits placed on the power granted to her by her office should terrify you, and be cause for her removal from the bench. Do not fall into the trap of letting bad actors train all your focus on Trump so they can break laws for there may come a day where you desperately need the guardrails to hold.
It’s really too late for this. That Trump is trying to assume absolute power is just too obvious at this point. What’s happening is what many saw coming, even from the very day he descended the elevator in Trump Tower in 2015 and announced. Overall, not just in this comment, you have been trying to dissuade our eyes and ears from seeing and hearing the mindset of an authoritarian, intent on controlling what Americans even think! The AP news organ still can’t attend briefings, despite what the courts told the administration. Everyone must think like Trump.

Many of us can see what is happening. It just is not being hidden from us very well, at all! Your most recent “don’t support authoritarianism” advice was absurd at this point. We know who the authoritarian is. Trump. We know who cannot tolerate any dissent is. Trump. We know who is pulling out all the stops to divide Americans. Trump. We know who is rewriting our recent history, with lies, and in support of a power grab, in support of destroying equal status among the three branches of the federal government. Trump.

We can all see this as clearly as can be. You might as well tell us the sun rises in the West, at this point. You’re ensconced in a different reality than many of us. Your advice asks us to reject the clear and obvious understanding of what is happening. Nothing you have ever said can hide the truth. Your’s is the voice of unreason. Your’s is the voice of the blind. Everything is so clear for anyone with eyes to see and ears to hear, that your advice has long since assumed the status of “insulting to the intelligence”.
 
That a lower court judge in the United States is clearly trying to usurp power beyond the limits placed on the power granted to her by her office should terrify you
Start with the wannabe dictator. I honestly think one man trying to assume absolute power over 350 million citizens is a wake up call. Your efforts to take our minds off of Trump’s effort to assume as much power, over our lives, as he can get away with, is just silly at this stage.


Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution explicitly grants Congress the power “to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises.” Tariffs, being a form of tax on imports, fall squarely within this provision. Therefore, any effort to impose or modify them must come from the legislative branch.

Despite this clear constitutional mandate, various statutes—such as the Trade Expansion Act of 1962—have been interpreted to allow presidential tariff actions under the guise of national security or economic emergency. However, these laws do not alter the fundamental constitutional structure: Congress cannot relinquish its core powers, and the executive branch cannot assume them without a constitutional amendment. Taxes and tariffs are indisputably a core power of the legislative, not the executive, branch.
 

The Trump administration’s plan to dust off the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 was in the works long before March 15. But the precise timing was hazy. Immigration attorneys went to federal court that morning to try to block the government from using the extraordinary wartime authority, which allows deportations without due process. There were few signs that the White House was about to use the law to send planeloads of Venezuelans to a prison complex in El Salvador.

The first person to alert the public that the flights would actually take place was not an official or a lawyer or a journalist, but a retired J.P. Morgan executive living in Ohio named Tom Cartwright. “TWO HIGHLY UNUSUAL ICE flights showing up now from Harlingen to El Salvador,” he wrote on social media, noting that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement had taken that route, flying out of a city in southern Texas, only once during the past month and a half. “Venezuelan deportation??”

Immigration attorneys raced back to court. And the events of the next several hours took the country closer to a constitutional crisis than any other clash to date between Donald Trump and the judicial branch, as Trump officials brushed off D.C. District Court Judge James E. Boasberg’s order to halt the flights.

Cartwright’s role in the episode isn’t well known. But over the past two months, as immigrant-rights groups, congressional aides, and reporters have struggled to keep tabs on the Trump administration’s deportation push, they have relied more and more on Cartwright, a 71-year-old immigrant-rights activist who, in retirement, has become an eagle-eyed tracker of U.S. deportation flights, which the government rarely publicizes.

Every day, he compiles data on ICE flights, applying skills developed over a career managing banks with hundreds of billions of dollars in assets. Using publicly available information from aviation-tracking sites, he produces weekly and monthly reports detailing where ICE Air—the government’s deportation airline—is directing its planes.

Over the past several weeks, Cartwright has become the go-to source for many people looking for details on the Trump administration’s deportation flights to Guantánamo Bay, its use of military transport planes, and the controversial flights to El Salvador. Think tanks and legal organizations cite his work. This past weekend, when The New York Times published a visual report describing how the frequency of U.S. deportation flights has not significantly increased since Trump took office, despite the president’s promises, the article cited “a New York Times review of an independent database.” The database is Cartwright’s. His work was the basis for a similar CNN story earlier this month.

Cartwright began tracking ICE flights during Trump’s first term and continued sending out monthly reports to journalists, nonprofit groups, and congressional staff through the Biden administration. But Trump’s pledge to deport “millions” in his second term—and his mobilization of federal resources and aggressive use of executive authorities—has recently put Cartwright’s data in higher demand.

“He took information that was publicly available but labor-intensive to compile, and did something nobody else was doing,” Adam Isacson, a border-security analyst at the Washington Office on Latin America, a rights organization in D.C., told me. “I don’t know if he expected this second career to make him basically the world’s only credible public source on U.S. deportation flights, just as they were becoming part of one of the United States’ biggest national news stories.”

“He’s indispensable,” added Robyn Barnard, an advocate for refugees with the group Human Rights First, who told me she was stunned when she first learned of Cartwright’s background in banking rather than activism.​


Soft-spoken and bookish, with a graying beard, glasses, and a gentlemanly manner, Cartwright takes a more modest view of his role in the nation’s immigration furor. “I think that these people deserve the dignity of at least someone paying attention to what’s happening to them,” he told me, referring to the deportees on ICE Air. “It’s a dehumanizing process.”
 
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