It's OVER: Trump confirms he won't bring back "accidentally" deported man to El Salvador prisons + Confirms US citizens are next

bnew

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https://bsky.app/profile/readsettle.rs‬/post/3lniatrmzsc2l
1/35
🇺 bencollins.bsky.social
The media doesn't want you to see that it's not a jail, it's slavery.

[QUOTED POST]
🇺 ‪@readsettle.rs‬
one of the tasks of the American left is to explain to retail and service workers that this is the future that America has planned for them
https://video.bsky.app/watch/did:pl...arm7kzcmcyndvd2dqg7hgiid542jtju/playlist.m3u8

2/35
🇺 reckless.bsky.social
lol the math isn’t even right - 2:1 means a max of 3 years and three months for a ten year sentence which is also definitely not happening

3/35
🇺 realimgroot.bsky.social
Or maybe the math is right - so they sentence people to longer terms up front?
But hey - if someone is making a profit from this slave labor - then expect it to be scaled up. Way up.
Speaking of this - where is Erik Prince?

4/35
🇺 jbthethird.bsky.social
Who is this back-of-the-class white-boy loser describing it like it's some beautiful modern office building?

5/35
🇺 hangsolonm.bsky.social
THANK YOU!!!

My first thought was, "Why does this half-wit fukkwad sound SO GODDAMNED HAPPY about what his dead eyes are surveying?!?"

6/35
🇺 jbthethird.bsky.social
It’s unreal. They’re all MAGA ghouls! 🤬

7/35
🇺 tlcreque.bsky.social
Well, at least his hubris and lack of empathy confirmed our fears are true. Slavery is what its about.

8/35
🇺 seacowindustries.bsky.social
Proud young Incel glorifying unpaid slave work is a maga marching order.
🤦‍♀️
Normalizing sweatshops again in ‘Murica. Profoundly disturbing. Who do they think is going to end up there? Their own people, the Reality TV crowd, dumped from sucking at the government teat.
Too rich.

9/35
🇺 aurelienmorel.bsky.social
Interesting that an American goes and pretends it's a new thing, when a whole lot of prisons in the US use the jailed to make industrial products (in fact they make a whole lot of defense products), while paying the workforce way under the normal rates.

Yay slavery.

10/35
🇺 peggychoosesbear.bsky.social


11/35
🇺 prayinfortheplanet.bsky.social
What is this guy doing? You can't romanticize slavery.

12/35
🇺 robobearart.bsky.social
He’s there to get some action

13/35
🇺 bigheadtunes.bsky.social
Workers that can undercut local wages, can't ask for a raise, organize for collective bargaining rights; an industrialist's wet dream. Without ever getting to the point of how many possibly don't belong there in the first place. This pud is selling the benefits of a Jim Crow era chain gang.

14/35
🇺 richardson8.bsky.social
How many are in that prison for being poor???

15/35
🇺 reprapryn.bsky.social
Considering how poor a lot of Salvadorans are, don't think that is as much the case. More that if anybody does anything to step out gets put in there.

In the US? Yeah I can imagine this current admin bringing back debt crimes.

16/35
🇺 richardson8.bsky.social
I was referring back to the Jim Crow era when Black Americans were jailed and put on "work crews" if they didn't have a certain amount of money with them when accosted by "police".

17/35
🇺 reprapryn.bsky.social
Misunderstood, that's probably happening in the rural indigenous heavy parts and the line between government officers and raiders is very porous at best

Not sure if it's to the level of Jim Crow. The US set a high bar for just how blatant robbery with a badge can be

18/35
🇺 noelkeith.bsky.social
Same here in Arkansas already!

They do NOT pay the folks in ADOC for their work. Nothing.

Then everything at the commissary is $$$ so their friends and family send them money. Hell, it costs money to even get emails back and fourth with them.

And now they loosened child labor laws too!

🤦‍♂️

19/35
🇺 noelkeith.bsky.social
It may be the only time in a couple centuries that Arkansas of all places is ahead of the curve.

And trust me, that’s a wicked bad sign to live under.

20/35
🇺 fedup90611.bsky.social
American companies like Coke, Mc Donald’s, Starbucks etc.. make a profit of about 2 billion dollars a year off of prison labor.

21/35
🇺 pjlundquist.bsky.social
“I’m a young man with the most privilege a person can be born with on this earth explaining how enslaving others isn’t bad, it’s good business! And I’m speaking with wildly more confidence than I should possibly have for my age, experience, and lack of basic human empathy!”

22/35
🇺 tamelaredfin.bsky.social
Yeah, I wanted to vomit.
Yay sweat shop work! /Facetious

23/35
🇺 gimpynurse.bsky.social
US prisons outsource those state visitor hotlines for free travel guides to 'secure' prisoners. Other companies also use prison labor. Not new. Not unique to countries OUTSIDE of the US.

www.careeraddict.com/prison-labou...
bafkreiedvwwrhjrjayojjzjx5moq7rqh5u6w7izoil34gsynasx2osi3ta@jpeg


24/35
🇺 itsme-sandy.bsky.social
Since trump paid El Salvadore to take in people he deported (without due process) I guess this means he's sending jobs overseas.

25/35
🇺 karen-newcombe.bsky.social
I bet they never get out.

26/35
🇺 vaxxedcynic.bsky.social
What in the mealy mouthed propaganda did I just watch

27/35
🇺 rebeccarhelm.bsky.social
nothing like state-sponsored indentured servitude to cut down retail prices

28/35
🇺 areyaserious.bsky.social
when slavery was abolished in the states, there is a clause in there that says except in prisons.

29/35
🇺 paulwillyjean.bsky.social
Funny he keeps talking about taking time off their sentence when they’ve not even had a trial. Besides, they’re sent there for life, when you halve ♾️, you still get ♾️.

A state reliant on slave labour is not self-reliant; it’s a slave economy.

30/35
🇺 paulwillyjean.bsky.social
That last point also applies to the US and their 13th amendment

31/35
🇺 nopointsforstyle.bsky.social
Ayup. American prisons are also sites of slave labor.

32/35
🇺 stewardn.bsky.social
it’s so funny that it took forever to find this comment! It’s amazing how Americans latch onto to shyt that has happened for years here. I will never not get over how little people know about what’s under their noses.

33/35
🇺 stewardn.bsky.social
*onto shyt lol

34/35
🇺 missingthept.bsky.social
bsky.app/profile/miss...

35/35
🇺 grandmak.bsky.social
Hey you got prisoners in my work camp!

You made slaves of my prisoners!

It's two bad things in one!

(Both shrug. Big friendly laughter as they clink their slave produced goods together in a toast.)

To post tweets in this format, more info here: https://www.thecoli.com/threads/tips-and-tricks-for-posting-the-coli-megathread.984734/post-52211196
 

bnew

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Three U.S. citizens, ages 2, 4 and 7, swiftly deported from Louisiana​


The cases have renewed concerns that the Trump administration’s expedited deportations are violating the rights of both citizens and noncitizens.

April 26, 2025 at 6:06 p.m. EDT27 minutes ago

4 min

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers gather for a briefing before an enforcement operation on Jan. 27 in Silver Spring, Maryland. (Alex Brandon/AP)

By Emmanuel Felton

and

Maegan Vazquez

Three U.S. citizen children from two different families were deported with their mothers by Immigration and Customs Enforcement during the early hours of Friday morning. One of them is a 4-year-old with Stage 4 cancer who was deported without medication or the ability to contact their doctors, the family’s lawyer said.

According to their lawyers, both families were taken into custody while attending routine check-ins this week in New Orleans as part of the Intensive Supervision Appearance Program, which allows individuals to remain in their communities while undergoing immigration proceedings. Lawyers say the families were taken to Alexandria, Louisiana, a three-hour drive from New Orleans, where they were prevented from communicating with their family members and legal representatives and then put on a flight to Honduras.

The cases have renewed concerns that the Trump administration’s expedited deportations are violating the due process rights of both citizens and noncitizens.

I don’t know how much more of a blatant or clear constitutional violation there can be than deporting U.S. citizens without due process,” said Alanah Odoms, executive director of the ACLU of Louisiana. Especially with some of those citizens being the most vulnerable of all vulnerable, children, and not just any children, children with medical conditions that are dire.”

The U.S. government has never released data on how many U.S. citizens have been wrongfully detained or deported by ICE. But independent investigations have revealed that ICE has arrested, detained, deported and issued detainers — requests to local jails to hold a person in custody — for thousands of citizens since the agency’s creation in 2003.

Lawyers representing the father of the 2-year-old U.S. citizen who was deported, identified as V.M.L. in court documents, filed an emergency petition in the Western District of Louisiana on Thursday seeking her release. The child was put on a plane to Honduras the next morning before the court opened.

Hours after the deportation, U.S. District Judge Terry A. Doughty, a Trump appointee, issued an order expressing his concern that the girl had been deported against her father’s wishes while stressing it is “illegal and unconstitutional” to deport U.S. citizens.

“The government contends that this is all OK because the mother wishes that the child be deported with her,” wrote Doughty, who has been lauded for his conservative rulings in the past. “But the court doesn’t know that.”

Doughty set a May 16 court hearing to investigate his “strong suspicion that the government just deported a U.S. citizen with no meaningful process.” The order did not call for the girl’s return or recommend any recourse for the family.

According to court filings, the girl had accompanied her mother and 11-year-old sister to the immigration appointment in New Orleans on Tuesday morning. About an hour later, her father, who had driven the family into New Orleans for the meeting, received a call informing him that the family had been taken into custody. That night, the girl’s father was allowed to speak with her mother for only a minute before an ICE agent ended the call, lawyers contend. Lawyers say the man did not get the chance to speak to his partner or child again until after they were released in Honduras.

“Both of these mothers were held without the ability to speak with their co-parents and the guardians of their children while making this incredibly personal and difficult assessment about what was best for their children,” said Gracie Willis, the lawyer for V.M.L.’s father.

Justice Department lawyers argued that “the man claiming to be V.M.L.'s father” had failed to prove his identity to the government despite requests that he present himself to ICE agents, adding that he had also “demonstrated considerable hesitation” regarding the inquiries into his immigration status. The man’s lawyers included V.M.L.’s birth certificate in their fillings, which shows she was born in Baton Rouge and lists the names of both her mother and father.

The government is not disputing the immigration status of any of the three children. Instead, officials contend that the undocumented mothers opted to take their citizen children with them back to Honduras. In their court filing, Justice Department lawyers attached a note they say was written by V.M.L.’s mother saying that she was taking the child with her to Honduras.

“It is common that parents want to be removed with their children,” Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, told The Washington Post.

Willis says ICE’s refusal to allow the women to talk to their lawyers meant there was no way to verify whether that was true in these cases.

“We have absolutely no idea whether they ever actually did give consent for their children to come with them or if they did under what kind of duress and what other options were presented to them,” Willis said.
 

bnew

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[Other] In interview, Trump essentially admits to framing a guy with clearly altered evidence.



Posted on Wed Apr 30 11:38:47 2025 UTC




Commented on Wed Apr 30 11:46:55 2025 UTC

Abrego Garcia's case hinges around his membership of the gang MS13, something that the Trump administration doubled down on by presenting a clearly altered image of a tattoo. DJT's adherents defended the image saying it was a "translation of the meaning" but most knew it was an attempt to present as legitimate to influence public opinion. This is DJT admitting to that attempt of passing the clearly altered image as legitimate.


Commented on Wed Apr 30 11:53:59 2025 UTC

C'mon the guy with 34 felonies, wouldn't lie. That's the pillar of honesty right there.
 
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