As I read this frightening post by Thom Hartmann, I was reminded of the many times in first term that he longed for protestors or suspects to be roughed up. He spoke to police officers in New York and urged them not to be so gentle when they apprehended suspects. He encouraged his audience to beat up troublemakers and send him their legal bills. He has a strange love of violence, though he himself dodged the draft five times.
Hartmann describes the freedom of ICE to arrest and detain anyone without a warrant, without any due process. Where is this going?
It can happen here. It is happening here.
Imagine stepping off a plane in the United States, fully expecting to enter the country without issue, only to be surrounded by armed agents, handcuffed, and thrown into a freezing detention center. No trial. No lawyer. No contact with the outside world.
In Trump’s America, you are no longer guaranteed your rights or freedom—because now, it takes nothing more than an ICE agent’s “suspicion” to make you disappear.
This isn’t a mistake. It’s part of an expanding system of cruelty, where ICE—once an agency tasked with immigration enforcement—is now operating like an unchecked police force, targeting legal residents, visitors, and even US citizens with impunity.
They have become—since the days when Trump sent them here into Portland without ID to kidnap citizens off the streets and torment them in 2020—the Führer’s private police force. His very own “protection squads” or Schutzstaffel.
People who follow every rule, complete all the required paperwork, and obey every regulation are still finding themselves locked away, held in horrific conditions, and stripped of their rights—all based on the whims of an agent who doesn’t even need evidence to justify an arrest.
A U.S. citizen from Chicago was among 22 people recently subjected to unlawful arrests and detention by ICE. The U.S. Government Accountability Office found that during Trump’s first term, immigration authorities asked to hold approximately 600 likely citizens and actually deported about 70 likely citizens.
But now, in part because of the Laken Riley Act, it’s getting worse. Forty-two Democrats in the House and fourteen in the Senate voted to pass this execrable GOP bill last month; it was named after a young woman murdered by an undocumented alien whose story was relentlessly promoted by Fox “News” and other rightwing hate media.
That law, recently signed by Trump, says that ICE now has the authority to detain anybody — anybody — for an indefinite period of time — no time limit whatsoever — if an ICE agent simply says that he or she “suspects” the person is in the country illegally or without documentation.
Did you think, “It can’t happen here”?
Wake up: Trump has already begun putting it into effect, although our media seem curiously silent about its application.
Fabian Schmidt, a German-born engineer, has lived in the United States for nearly two decades, legally working, paying taxes, and contributing to his community. None of that mattered when he returned home from a trip abroad. As soon as he landed at Logan Airport in Boston, ICE agents pulled him aside. His green card renewal was “flagged” for some unknown reason—no explanation, no opportunity to clarify, just a red mark in a government system.
That was all it took. ICE stripped him of his clothes, subjected him to hours of aggressive questioning, and locked him in a detention center. They threw him into an ice-cold shower and left him shivering on the concrete floor, humiliated and terrified.
For days, his mother, Astrid, desperately tried to find him. She called ICE, Customs and Border Protection, and any agency that might give her an answer. They either ignored her or outright lied, claiming they had no record of her son. When she finally learned where he was, Fabian was barely holding himself together. “They treat us like animals,” he told her.
And why was he there? Because of a supposed “bureaucratic error.” ICE used a minor paperwork issue as an excuse to detain a legal resident of the United States without due process, a tactic that’s becoming frighteningly common.
For Jessica Brösche, a German tattoo artist, her visit to the United States was supposed to be brief—just a trip to see friends and enjoy the country. She had a valid passport, a return ticket, and legal permission to enter under the Visa Waiver Program. Yet, ICE decided that she might try to work while visiting, a baseless assumption that required no proof and no justification.
Just “suspicion.” That was enough to detain her indefinitely.
Once inside, the nightmare deepened. They threw her into a cell with no bed and no access to legal assistance. For eight straight days, they kept her in solitary confinement. The lights never dimmed, and the sounds of other detainees screaming in despair echoed through the walls. She started hallucinating, her grip on reality slipping. Desperate to feel something, anything real, she punched the walls until her knuckles bled.
Meanwhile, her best friend, Amelia, searched frantically for her. ICE refused to confirm her location or even acknowledge that they had detained her. No charges, no trial, no legal recourse—just silence.
Jessica’s case isn’t unique. People who follow all immigration rules are being detained under vague suspicions, often disappearing into a bureaucratic black hole. And once they’re inside the system, their rights mean nothing.
Consider Jasmine Mooney, the actor who starred in the American Pie franchise and a Canadian businesswoman who played by the rules. She secured a job offer, completed all visa paperwork, and followed every U.S. immigration law to the letter. But that didn’t stop ICE from shackling her, chaining her wrists, ankles, and waist as if she were a violent offender.
For days, she was trapped in a brutal private, for-profit detention facility, laying on the bare floor with nothing but a crinkled foil sheet for warmth. Then, in the dead of night, ICE dragged her from her cell, bound her in chains again, and forced her onto a bus with dozens of other women. They drove for hours, denying them food, water, or bathroom breaks. By the time she arrived at another facility, she had been awake for 24 hours and was too weak to stand.
To this day, ICE refuses to explain why she was detained. And why would they? They don’t have to. The agency operates with absolute power, detaining people for as long as they want, answering to no one.
Moody tells her horrifying story to The Guardian, writing:
“I was then placed in a real jail unit: two levels of cells surrounding a common area, just like in the movies. I was put in a tiny cell alone with a bunk bed and a toilet. …
“There were around 140 of us in our unit. Many women had lived and worked in the US legally for years but had overstayed their visas – often after reapplying and being denied. They had all been detained without warning.”
These aren’t isolated cases. ICE has transformed itself into an authoritarian force that detains people indefinitely on suspicion alone. No evidence? No trial? No problem.
And the for-profit prison industry that’s holding many if not most of them has no incentive to help these people; the more they detail and the longer they stay, the more money the prison companies make (which they then share as campaign donations with Republican politicians).
ICE agents don’t need proof. They only need the power to act—and Trump has given it to them.
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I read this with horror. I am left feeling like I should be doing something, but I don’t know what.
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Can you say USSR or Communist China or N. Korea or any other tin pot dictatorship with an absolute ruler. That is what America now is. . . not that it hasn’t been that way for minorities for a long time.
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What is equally shocking is that there is little to no coverage from the mainstream news agencies They are afraid of becoming a target of the “iron fist.”
Moreover, how are Democrats going to launch a firm resistance if representatives are either too lazy or too incompetent to understand the implications of bills they endorse? So far the lack of party unity is enabling fascism. Pathetic! Democrats perhaps need a strong whip like LBJ, who was not known for being a nice guy, but he got the civil rights bill passed.
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“He has a strange love of violence, though he himself dodged the draft five times.”
The convicted rapist, fraud and felon Diaper Don the Porn Star’s John enjoys, gets his thrills, watching other people suffer, who he caused to suffer. He avoided the draft because he doesn’t like to suffer or even risk suffering. He’s not into pain unless it is someone else who is hurting. He’s a coward surrounded by secret service agents, who are trained to take bullets to protect him.
I have no doubts that hearing about a half million people died because of his lies during the pandemic thrilled him because he caused them to suffer and die.
I’ve read taht witnesses say he was obsessed with glee in his eyes watching the TV on January 6, 2021, as his mob attacked the Capital Police. Now he can order the Capital Police to stand down and fire anyone who defies him.
That’s why he should never be the leader of a country and have the power to order the launch of thousands of nuclear weapons.
If Don the Con, the family crime lord, was responsible for billions dying, he’d be more than thrilled. He’d reach a level if ecstasy never measured before.
“Democrats in Washington, D.C., are worried Donald Trump could take control of the capital city’s police force.
“The president does not need congressional approval to seize the Metropolitan Police Department and its 3,400 sworn officers.
“A legal loophole that has never been used could allow Trump to put the D.C. force under his power. …”
https://www.yahoo.com/news/fears-over-trump-power-grab-155928306.html
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This is all so horrific. It’s not the United States that most people think they live in. The people who do this are evil.
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And the people who STILL support and defend the people who do this are complicit.
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Trump and Hegseth’s response was to vilify the journalist, not to tell the truth. Trump never admits error. His flunkies copy him.
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yup
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There was well-documented sadism (taking erotic pleasure in the torture of others) in the Nazi death camps. Sounds as though the same is true here.
Evil. True evil. One day we shall need to bring these evil thugs with badges to account for what they are doing. Trials. Punishment.
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