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This Is the Land of Wolves Now

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  john-russell  •  3 days ago  •  5 comments

By:   Jonathan V. Last

This Is the Land of Wolves Now
Masked agents snatching people off the street. Government officials using caged prisoners for propaganda videos. We are the villains.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


Masked agents snatching people off the street. Government officials using caged prisoners for propaganda videos. We are the villains.


Jonathan V. LastMar 27, 20251,085

1. POWs


Two weeks ago Donald Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act, a law that grants the president extraordinary powers during times of war. Here's his proclamation:

Tren de Aragua (TdA) is a designated Foreign Terrorist Organization with thousands of members, many of whom have unlawfully infiltrated the United States and are conducting irregular warfare and undertaking hostile actions against the United States.

Some of the individuals who have been apprehended under the Alien Enemies Act have been rendered to El Salvador's CECOT mega-prison. Yesterday, Kristi Noem, America's secretary of homeland security, toured this facility and then staged a photo-op and interview in front of a cell containing dozens of what we can only assume are prisoners of the supposed "war"1 we are fighting with Tren de Aragua.2

Look at these images. What do you see?

In the background are a few dozen men, crammed into a cell. Their bunks are stacked four-high. Their heads are freshly shaved. They wear identical white shorts. They are all shirtless.

Their poses are similar. Three rows of prisoners stand still in the front as Noem speaks, their hands either at their sides or clasped in front of them. The rest of them are arrayed on the bunks so as to create a visual for Noem's use. None of these men is speaking. Or moving. Or making any facial expressions. They have clearly been posed by the jailers, forced to hold position so that they can be useful props for the American woman so that she can manufacture propaganda for her regime.

We have seen this kind of thing before. Just not from America.

I want to be deadly serious about this: We are now the bad guys.

Let's discuss.

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The use of prisoners for propaganda purposes is as old as war itself. But there are a few recent examples you may recall. ISIS made extensive use of videos and pictures of imprisonment and execution. The Viet Cong and North Vietnamese alternated their approach. Sometimes they used American POWs as props to suggest that all was well in their camps and that prisoners were being treated properly. (They were not.) Other times, they used images of American prisoners as tools to spread fear. They would parade captured American soldiers before mobs and display them at press conferences.

The goal is always the same, though: To use prisoners' bodies as weapons of political war and to do so against their will.

This is what evil, illiberal regimes do.

Liberal regimes have standards for the treatment of prisoners. These standards are codified under the Geneva Conventions, which the United States has signed and ratified.

Among the standards dictated by the Geneva Conventions is this: Prisoners may not be publicly exploited for purposes of propaganda.3

Another standard of liberal governments is that people who present themselves through legal pathways as refugees fleeing oppression are vetted and provided due process, not disappeared into foreign gulags.

And yet here we are.

A high-ranking American official visits a prison on foreign soil which we are using to warehouse enemies of her regime. She appears in a fitted long-sleeve tee and active-wear slacks. There is a ballcap on her head and a pound of makeup smeared across her plasticized face. A gold Rolex Daytona—worth more than some of these men will make in their entire lives—sits proudly on her dainty wrist. Every piece of this visual is carefully engineered.

She visits the prison armory and shakes her head approvingly while inspecting the rifles. Then she pauses in front of a cage where human beings have been posed to her liking so that she can speak to the cameras in front of a powerful visual. She is sending a message on behalf of her country.

The message is this:

America is no longer a shining city on a hill. It is no longer the leader of the free world. It no longer stands on the side of liberty as a beacon for those who yearn to breathe free.

This is the land of wolves now.

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It gets worse, by the way.

We'll get to "worse" in a minute. But I want to hammer something home: When autocratic regimes take hold, solidarity is the only defense. Everyone on the side of liberalism has to stand as one. We have to defend each other. There is strength in community.

The Bulwark started as a defense of "conservatism." That battle turned out to be lost before we even entered the fight. We became a pro-democracy media company. And we're still that. But maybe the most important thing we are right now is a community of people rallying to pass through this crucible. Together.

I know that I couldn't do it alone. That's why I have Sarah and the rest of this team. It's why I have readers I talk to every day. We lift each other up and if it comes to it, we'll defend each other.

You don't have to join The Bulwark—if you have other communities around you to rely on, that's great. But every American who wants to live in freedom and truth is going to need a community in the coming months. If you're looking for someone to stand with, we'll have your back here.

2. Tufts


On Tuesday evening a masked group abducted a woman off the streets of Boston. They wore no uniforms. Their faces were covered. You can watch the video here.

According to Zeteo, the woman being abducted is Rumeysa Ozturk, a Tufts University grad student and Turkish national with a valid student visa. She does not appear to have been charged with any crimes. Our government merely says that her student visa has been revoked because she "supported Hamas," but declined to give further details.

Ask yourself: Why was she handcuffed and pulled off the street? She had not committed a crime; she did not present a danger. She could have been notified of the change in her visa status by mail, given instructions to leave the country promptly, and given a deadline with which to comply.4

But merely pulling Ozturk's visa wasn't the point. Even having Ozturk leave the country wasn't the point. The point was to arrest her.

The point is to create a climate in which agents of the state routinely wear masks to conceal their identities and street abductions are not out of the ordinary.

As a fellow on Bluesky said, "If you're a police officer in America and you think you need to wear a mask to do your job, you shouldn't be a police officer in America."

That was true enough in the old America.

But we don't live there anymore. We live in a country where the federal government allies itself with Russian and South American dictators while taking sides against democratic allies. A country that threatens its neighbors with annexation. A country that views the Geneva Conventions as namby-pamby suggestions that only apply to suckers and losers. A country that uses secret police.

And perhaps most importantly, a country where the regime no longer abides by rulings from the existing legal system.

After she was detained on Tuesday, Ozturk's attorney filed a petition in federal district court in Boston challenging the legality of her detention and asking she not be moved out of Massachusetts.

"(Ozturk) shall not be moved outside the District of Massachusetts without first providing advance notice of the intended move," District Judge Indira Talwani, an Obama appointee, wrote Tuesday in an order. Talwani ordered the government to respond to Ozturk's petition by Friday.

But she already had been transferred to the Central Louisiana ICE Processing Center in Basile, a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said Wednesday.

It is not clear whether Ozturk had already been transferred out of Boston to Louisiana by the time judge Talwani issued her order.

It's only been eight weeks.

I cannot imagine what this country will look like in a year.

The people pictured in San Salvador Ghraib don't particularly resemble the Venezuelans from the snuff film the White House put out; perhaps she is posing in front of local Salvadoran prisoners.

2

Important to get the terminology right here so the Trump administration doesn't admonish us. The Venezuelan refugees are enemy combatants in a war. The people we bombed in Yemen are merely victims of an "attack" plan.

3

Some other requirements of the Geneva Conventions, as explained by the secretary of the Navy in 1971:

  • "[D]etaining power [must] quickly provide the names, serial numbers and addresses of all prisoners so that the next of kin can be promptly advised."

  • "[N]ot more than a week after capture every prisoner shall be allowed to write directly to his family telling them about his situation, his health and giving them his address, and that thereafter they shall be allowed to send and receive not less than two letters and four cards each month."

It is unclear whether these mandates are being followed for the prisoners at CECOT.

4

If we care about government "efficiency," then it is much more cost effective to use the bureaucracy to inform people of the need to leave the country than to pay half a dozen agents to spend hours staking out, arresting, and processing a single immigrant.


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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    3 days ago

Kristi Noem may be a war criminal. 

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2  seeder  JohnRussell    3 days ago

www.mediaite.com   /opinion/kristi-noems-el-salvador-prison-photo-op-might-have-violated-the-geneva-convention/

Kristi Noem’s El Salvador Prison Photo Op Might Have Violated the Geneva Convention

Sarah Rumpf 7-8 minutes   3/27/2025


Sarah Rumpf Mar 27th, 2025, 5:58 pm

Screenshot-2025-03-27-at-4-50-36-PM-1200x648.jpghttps://am13.mediaite.com/med/cnt/uploads/2025/03/Screenshot-2025-03-27-at-4-50-36-PM-300x162.jpg 300w, 768w, 1536w, 2048w, 632w" sizes="(max-width: 1200px) 100vw, 1200px" >

Department of Homeland Security Secretary   Kristi Noem’s   photo op in an El Salvadoran prison drew swift backlash online, but some observers are pointing out that it may have also violated the Geneva Convention.

A short video Noem posted on social media drew a cascade of critical responses, commenting on not just the chilling visual of the prisoners crowded in the cell behind her, heads shaved and shirtless, but the jarring contrast with her perfectly coifed hair, makeup, and what appeared to be a Rolex Daytona watch, which currently retails for nearly   $50,000 .

Noem was at the   Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo , abbreviated CECOT, in Tecoluca, El Salvador, a notorious maximum security prison where the Trump administration has controversially deported several hundred   Venezuelan immigrants , claiming they are part of the Tren de Aragua (TdA) gang. Several of the arrests have already been challenged as cases of mistaken identity or misinterpreting   tattoos   of sports logos, song lyrics, etc. as gang-related. There has been bipartisan   criticism   of the treatment of these immigrants over due process and other civil rights issues, including questions about the longstanding reports of human rights   abuses   at CECOT.

I toured the CECOT, El Salvador’s Terrorism Confinement Center.

President Trump and I have a clear message to criminal illegal aliens: LEAVE NOW.  

If you do not leave, we will hunt you down, arrest you, and you could end up in this El Salvadorian prison.   pic.twitter.com/OItDqNsFxM

— Secretary Kristi Noem (@Sec_Noem)   March 26, 2025

Reporters with the Associated Press also captured a video of Noem’s visit, as seen in the YouTube clip below.

In both video clips, Noem can be seen speaking about immigration issues in support of President   Donald Trump’s   agenda, calling the immigrants that the U.S. had sent there “terrorists.”

“Do not come to our country illegally,” Noem warned. “You will be removed and you will be prosecuted. But know that this facility is one of the tools in our toolkit that we will use if you commit crimes against the American people.”

In a March 15   executive order , Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 — the same law that was used to justify the detention of Japanese Americans during World War II — and declared that TdA was “a designated Foreign Terrorist Organization with thousands of members, many of whom have unlawfully infiltrated the United States and are conducting irregular warfare and undertaking hostile actions against the United States,” and part of a “regime-sponsored, narco-terrorism enterprise.”

Under the   Alien Enemies Act , the president has additional powers to detain, secure, and remove non-citizens during times of a declared war or an “invasion or predatory incursion” that is “perpetrated, attempted, or threatened” against U.S. territory. The White House has pointed to this law, and the president’s executive order issued pursuant to it, to justify the revocations of green cards, arrests and deportations, and other actions taken as necessary to “defend” the U.S. against an “invasion” of illegal immigrants.

But by invoking the Alien Enemies Act and repeatedly using language declaring the situation to be a war or invasion, some observers have argued, the Trump administration may have also invoked the Geneva Convention, the international humanitarian treaties that establish legal standards for human rights in war.

The humanitarian laws included in the Geneva Convention mandate that “prisoners of war must at all times be humanely treated and protected against acts of violence, intimidation, insults, and public curiosity,”   wrote   Secretary of the Navy   John H. Chafee   in 1971 during the height of the Vietnam War.

That means that “[p]risoners may not be publicly exploited for purposes of propaganda,”   wrote   Jonathan V. Last   in a scathing column at The Bulwark that pointed out the grotesque nature of Noem’s photo op, with the prisoners dressed alike, “crammed into a cell,” unmoving, silent, and not making any facial expressions.

“They have clearly been posed by the jailers, forced to hold position so that they can be useful props for the American woman so that she can manufacture propaganda for her regime,” wrote Last. “We have seen this kind of thing before. Just not from America.”

“I want to be deadly serious about this: We are now the bad guys,” he somberly added. The “goal” for such propagandistic photo ops was “always the same,” he added. “To use prisoners’ bodies as weapons of political war and to do so against their will. This is what evil, illiberal regimes do.”

Last lambasted the “carefully engineered” visual crafted by Noem and her staff, of a “high-ranking American official” visiting “foreign gulags” that America is using to “warehouse enemies of her regime”:

She visits the prison armory and shakes her head approvingly while inspecting the rifles. Then she pauses in front of a cage where human beings have been posed to her liking so that she can speak to the cameras in front of a powerful visual. She is sending a message on behalf of her country.

The message is this:

America is no longer a shining city on a hill. It is no longer the leader of the free world. It no longer stands on the side of liberty as a beacon for those who yearn to breathe free.

Regardless of how the specific nuances of international law would ultimately determine whether or not the Geneva Convention protection applies to Venezuelan immigrants the U.S. deports to an El Salvadoran prison, that shouldn’t be necessary the United States government to honor the principles of our own Constitution and laws. If these immigrants are violent criminals and gang members, that should be simple enough for the government to prove in court and allow these people at least a bare minimum of due process protections.

This is an opinion piece. The views expressed in this article are those of just the author.

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
3  Greg Jones    3 days ago

Once again you show that you don't "get it". It's all about sending a message

I'm sure all these actions have been run before very experienced and knowledgeable lawyers to get legal approval.

I see that some on the left sympathize with criminals and possible terrorists

 
 
 
Snuffy
Professor Participates
3.1  Snuffy  replied to  Greg Jones @3    3 days ago

They tend to ignore when those on the left also stage photographs. I also expect pushback on this post about how I'm just wrong. It really doesn't matter if you don't like the phrase, both sides do the same things.

Joaquin Castro stealthily captures photo and video at border detention center - The Washington Post

 
 
 
Thomas
PhD Guide
3.2  Thomas  replied to  Greg Jones @3    3 days ago
I'm sure all these actions have been run before very experienced and knowledgeable lawyers to get legal approval.

I am sure that they have not. 

I see that some on the left sympathize with criminals and possible terrorists

It is your turn to not get it. The reason that some people do not want anyone deported without due process is because, without due process, anyone can be deported. You, me, your neighbor... Without due process it is just load 'em in the van and make them go away. In this country, we normally like to follow due process so that we can make sure that the people are guilty of the crimes they stand accused of. 

 
 

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