The search for useful idiots
Before Renee Good’s body was cold, Trump, Noem, and
Vance grabbed
the national spotlight to defame her (terrorist mows
down federal agents!) while defending the goon who
murdered her.
The masked ICE agent who shot Good at close range held his cellphone in one hand while firing his gun with the other, showing more interest in spectacle than fear.
His video will be added to the DHS library of recordings to
generate bloodlust among the type of recruits ICE seeks: Proud
Boys, Oath Keepers, Three Percenters, pardoned J-6ers,
and basement-dwelling incels craving skin on skin action of any kind.
Under Noem’s guidance, and on the American taxpayers’ considerable dime, DHS records high resolution, highly-edited, “cinematic” style videos of their own brutality for recruitment propaganda. Like the midnight raid of a Chicago apartment building when DHS filmed a Black Hawk helicopter swooping in to terrify sleeping people with flash-bang grenades, most violence is staged, performative horror.
With the Supreme Court temporarily blocking
Trump’s deployment of military forces into U.S. cities, ICE is
stepping up, morphing into Trump’s Praetorian
guard. A look at DHS’ recruitment materials makes clear that ICE isn’t
targeting intelligent, law-respecting recruits, but a rabid ethnic
cleansing force to serve
Steve Miller’s white nationalist agenda.
ICE recruitment materials: emotional appeals to
unthinking racists
An online review shows DHS similarly misusing American iconography, manipulating emotions with depictions of a fictitious, ‘happier’ (ie, segregated) time in America by turning homey Norman Rockwell style graphics into sinister appeals for violence.
In September, DHS started using Rockwell’s images on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram, starting with the 1946 Working on the Statue of Liberty.
The image appears with ICE
slogans, “Protect Your Homeland. Defend Your Culture,” and adds:
“Those who do not want to be partakers of the American spirit ought not to
settle in America,” along with a URL where people can join ICE.
Rockwell’s family has asked
federal agencies to stop using his work because of DHS’ “increasingly
brutal and often illegal enforcement methods.” In early November,
Rockwell’s family wrote
an op-ed in USA
Today complaining that the Trump messages behind the posts run so
contrary to the artist’s personal beliefs that he would be “devastated” to see
his art “marshalled for the cause of persecution toward immigrant communities
and people of color.”
ICE is using us vs. them propaganda, video-game styled
recruitment tools

ICE’s You Tube
website features video after video of Fox News
“interviews”—propaganda— alongside professionally filmed fast-action shorts.
One video, “Veterans Day
Message” conflates ICE agents with the military. Spliced with war-time
footage, it shows fast action war scenes, paratroopers dropping from planes,
armed troops descending from helicopters, and a war-gaming situation room.
Another, “Florida 287(g) with Collier County Sheriff Rambosk,” is set in Florida. Accompanied by video game music, it features an “Alligator Alcatraz” sign above swampland complete with live alligators waiting for their prey.
Another, “Break the law. We regulate”
appeals to directly to thugs. It opens showing six masked ICE officers pulling
one man out of his car and shoving him to the ground, then segues to other
arrests as a narrator says, “Regulators. We regulate the stealing of property.
We damn good too. But you can’t be any geek off the street. You gotta be good
with the steal, you know what I mean, to earn your keep.”
Another features an Ohio sheriff in a ten gallon
cowboy hat bragging about how many illegal aliens are in his jail,
proclaiming, “Thank God that we have an administration, that we have ICE and
President Trump actually doing what people want.” Using taxpayers’ money to
film racist, political propaganda aimed at low intellect applicants is patently
illegal.
Minnesota fights back
Immediately after Good’s murder, the Trump regime doubled
down, and sent 1000
more ICE agents into Minnesota, on top of an already unwanted 2,100 DHS and
Border Patrol agents.
Trump officials know that increased ICE forces, now
expanding without
legal authority into civilian traffic stops, elevate
the threat to civilians. Since increased violence and civic unrest
will hasten
the day Trump declares martial law, escalation appears to be his goal.
St. Paul, Minneapolis, and the State of Minnesota are
fighting back. On Monday, they
filed suit, alleging that:
Thousands of armed and masked DHS agents have stormed the
Twin Cities to conduct militarized raids and carry out dangerous, illegal, and
unconstitutional stops and arrests in sensitive public places, including
schools and hospitals—all under the guise of lawful immigration enforcement.
This operation is driven by nothing more than the Trump
Administration’s desire to punish political opponents and score partisan
points—at the direct expense of Plaintiffs’ residents. Defendants’ actions
appear designed to provoke community outrage, sow fear, and inflict emotional
distress, and they are interfering with the ability of state and local
officials to protect and care for their residents….
Minnesota notes that ICE agents’ “inflammatory and unlawful
policing tactics provoke the protests the federal government seeks to
suppress.”
Kristi Noem’s DHS podium says it all, inscribed with “One of ours, all of yours,” the Nazi philosophy of collective punishment. By lore or fact, when one SS officer was killed in a Czech Village, the Nazis killed everyone in the village as retribution. Wildly disproportionate, lawless, ignorant, and brutal, the slogan complements ICE recruitment materials perfectly, and draws a map of where Trump’s ICE is heading.
Sabrina Haake is a columnist and 25+ year federal trial
attorney specializing in 1st and 14th A
defense. Her Substack, The
Haake Take, is free.
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