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| The worst of the worst, really? |
I was gone for a couple of weeks, and when I got back the whole place had gone
nuts. The president seemed bent on conquering Greenland, apparently because he
thinks the island is as big as it looks in the traditional Mercator projection
and he just had to have it, and had in fact persuaded the Venezuelan Nobel
Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado to give him her prize, or at least the
gold medal that represents it (the prize itself also includes a variable
monetary award of around 10 million Swedish kronor or one million US dollars,
which the recipient normally uses to benefit the cause for which it was
awarded, and which Machado didn't surrender to Trump, as far as I can learn,
though I'm sure he'd have cheerfully accepted the money if it was offered, and
the reputational enhancement that comes of having been judged worthy of the
prize by the Norwegian committee, a glory that can no more be transferred than
that of Trump's unearned Super Bowl rings and
Purple Hearts, as the Committee made clear).
Then there was the paramilitary occupation of Minnesota by 2000 irregular
troops, 3000 after January, which seemed a good deal more serious than all
that tomfoolery, more Miller than Trump if you know what I mean, with ICE and
CBP terrorizing the Twin Cities with their arbitrary seizures of people,
especially Somali and Latino, in "Operation Metro Surge" since Trump condemned
Somalia as "garbage", not so different from what we'd already seen in
California, Illinois, Oregon, North Carolina, and Washington, D.C., in
particular the ethnic profiling leading to arrests and detention of US
citizens and permanent residents and otherwise protected people and kidnaping
of children, parking them in the hideous prison camps rising around the
country, not to mention all the simple people occupying what may be considered
an "illegal" position on US territory (I'll get to that later) doing nothing
but working, often in what we call "essential" occupations, educating
themselves, and caring for their kids—the exceptional discipline of the
general population rising to help protect their neighbors evade the
invaders—and the out-of-control response of the latter, who seem to have
decided they're at war and so far murdered two.
Things are now apparently getting a little bit better. Seven hundred of the Guards have been removed from the site. Citizens and other
officially protected individuals are still getting wrongfully arrested for
immigration violations, but are now able to file a habeas claim to get
out, though not very quickly: it's going to take you a long time to get your
day in court as the
entire federal justice system in Minnesota
collapses:
the Minnesota U.S. Attorney’s Office has been crippled by mass resignations,
including some of its most senior career attorneys. That has left the
remaining DOJ attorneys in Minnesota inundated with more cases than they can
keep up with. But I’m not sure that does justice to what’s been happening.
It’s quite a bit worse than that.
The quality of lawyering has eroded to such a point that government lawyers
have been unable to keep up with the court orders demanding that detainees
be released. As a result, detainees have lingered in confinement even after
courts have ordered their release....
You've probably heard of Julie Le, a DHS lawyer seconded to the U.S.
Attorney's Office who was called in to explain why ICE was failing to comply
with court orders and more or less broke down in front of the judge:
“I wish you would just hold me in contempt of court so I can get 24 hours of
sleep,” Le said. “The system sucks, this job sucks, I am trying with every
breath I have to get you what I need.”
***