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Month: April 2025

The American Dream

Says the billionaire. No more upward mobility — just drone work for everyone. Maybe we’ll all be on drugs?

It sounds so great. Remember this?

Today, the iPhone is made at a number of different factories around China, but for years, as it became the bestselling product in the world, it was largely assembled at Foxconn’s 1.4 square-mile flagship plant, just outside Shenzhen. The sprawling factory was once home to an estimated 450,000 workers. Today, that number is believed to be smaller, but it remains one of the biggest such operations in the world. If you know of Foxconn, there’s a good chance it’s because you’ve heard of the suicides. In 2010, Longhua assembly-line workers began killing themselves. Worker after worker threw themselves off the towering dorm buildings, sometimes in broad daylight, in tragic displays of desperation – and in protest at the work conditions inside. There were 18 reported suicide attempts that year alone and 14 confirmed deaths. Twenty more workers were talked down by Foxconn officials.

The epidemic caused a media sensation – suicides and sweatshop conditions in the House of iPhone. Suicide notes and survivors told of immense stress, long workdays and harsh managers who were prone to humiliate workers for mistakes, of unfair fines and unkept promises of benefits.

The corporate response spurred further unease: Foxconn CEO, Terry Gou, had large nets installed outside many of the buildings to catch falling bodies. The company hired counsellors and workers were made to sign pledges stating they would not attempt to kill themselves.

Steve Jobs, for his part, declared: “We’re all over that” when asked about the spate of deaths and he pointed out that the rate of suicides at Foxconn was within the national average. Critics pounced on the comment as callous, though he wasn’t technically wrong. Foxconn Longhua was so massive that it could be its own nation-state, and the suicide rate was comparable to its host country’s. The difference is that Foxconn City is a nation-state governed entirely by a corporation and one that happened to be producing one of the most profitable products on the planet.

If the boss finds any problems, they don’t scold you then. They scold you later, in front of everyone, at a meeting

A cab driver lets us out in front of the factory; boxy blue letters spell out Foxconn next to the entrance. The security guards eye us, half bored, half suspicious. My fixer, a journalist from Shanghai whom I’ll call Wang Yang, and I decide to walk the premises first and talk to workers, to see if there might be a way to get inside.

The first people we stop turn out to be a pair of former Foxconn workers.“It’s not a good place for human beings,” says one of the young men, who goes by the name Xu. He’d worked in Longhua for about a year, until a couple of months ago, and he says the conditions inside are as bad as ever. “There is no improvement since the media coverage,” Xu says. The work is very high pressure and he and his colleagues regularly logged 12-hour shifts. Management is both aggressive and duplicitous, publicly scolding workers for being too slow and making them promises they don’t keep, he says. His friend, who worked at the factory for two years and chooses to stay anonymous, says he was promised double pay for overtime hours but got only regular pay. They paint a bleak picture of a high-pressure working environment where exploitation is routine and where depression and suicide have become normalised.

That’s from 2017. You can read the whole thing here.

Youtube

A Low Point For The American Legal System

Here’s Trump talking about the big law firms bowing and scraping. It’s just sad:

How noble. Here’s where that stands:

In an executive order signed Monday, President Donald Trump instructed Attorney General Pam Bondi to help defend police officers named in civil rights lawsuits. According to the order, whatever system the Justice Department creates “shall include the use of private-sector pro bono assistance for such law enforcement officers.”

The order does not explicitly direct any particular law firm to do anything. However, following previous executive orders targeting a number of elite firms, nine have agreed to deals with the president and collectively agreed to provide $940 million in pro bono legal services to support the president’s priorities.

Maybe they should just do a shitty job?

The point of the executive order is to “unleash” the police to crack down on the American people as any good fascist dictator would do:

When local leaders demonize law enforcement and impose legal and political handcuffs that make aggressively enforcing the law impossible, crime thrives and innocent citizens and small business owners suffer.  My Administration will therefore:  establish best practices at the State and local level for cities to unleash high-impact local police forces; protect and defend law enforcement officers wrongly accused and abused by State or local officials; and surge resources to officers in need.  My Administration will work to ensure that law enforcement officers across America focus on ending crime, not pursuing harmful, illegal race- and sex-based “equity” policies. 

The result will be a law-abiding society in which tenacious law enforcement officers protect the innocent, violations of law are not tolerated, and American communities are safely enjoyed by all their citizens again.

He’s trying to convince the American people that they are living in El Salvador 2019 when it was the murder capital of the world under siege from gangs. I suppose that his rural base, which has probably never seen a latino gang member, believes that US cities are a war zone but that doesn’t make it true.

More recently:

Can Trump defy reality and turn the country into Bukele’s El Salvador without the actual high crime that existed there? It looks like we’re going to find out. And he’s extorted the country’s most prestigious law firms into helping him do it.

One Word

I can think of a few that aren’t fit for polite company but I’ll refrain from posting there here and just yell them at the TV as I usually do. (My neighbors probably think I have Tourette’s Syndrome …)

Guess what? It’s going to get worse:

Back to the good old days …

The Fatuous Blame Game

A reporter asked about this at this morning’s Trump worship service:

I wish I could understand why otherwise functional adults have so much faith in this puerile moron. I guess they admire the fact that he always takes credit for others’ accomplishments and never takes responsibility for anything he does as if that’s the mark of a genius. It’s inexplicable to me but tens of millions of our fellow Americans not only respect and admire this man, they actually love and worship him.

Some of them say “Gulf of America”

Cultism is a powerful drug. We probably all have some tendencies that make us vulnerable to such things although I’m always struck by how incredibly weird and obnoxious most cult leaders are. But I’m sure that if the right combination of qualities came along in a liberal/progressive leader we could all be susceptible. I’ve seen signs of it in the not too distant past. The new media and technology have made it so much easier for people with such qualities to reach millions.

Meanwhile, here are some more highlights of Trump’s cabinet meeting this morning. The stupidity was prominently on display:

Au contraire, mon frere…

No, no we’re not.

These are very bizarre rituals that are not done by any other democratic leader in the world. WTF are we doing?

They Are Trying To Deport Every Non-Citizen In America

If they get birthright citizenship revoked, they can purge all the children of immigrants too.

Here’s another of those hardened criminals Trump and his MAGA sociopaths want run out of the country:

An Irish woman who has been living legally in the United States for decades has been taken into detention by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after a trip to Ireland to visit her sick father.

Cliona Ward (54), who went to the US in her early teens and is the sole carer for a son with special needs, is in an ICE facility in Tacoma, Washington state, according to the enforcement agency’s website.

Her sister, Orla Holladay, who also lives in the US, said Ward travelled back to Ireland recently with their stepmother to visit their father, who has dementia.

On her return to the US, Ward, who has been living in Santa Cruz, California, for more than 30 years, was questioned about drug possession convictions from more than a decade ago that have reportedly been “expunged” under state but not under federal law.

A holder of a valid green card, Ward was held when she landed at San Francisco International Airport as queries were raised about the past convictions

She was then released but returned to the airport last Monday to show documentation to officials from US Customs and Border Protection recording how the convictions had been expunged.

However, she was taken into custody, moved to a detention facility outside Seattle, Washington, and, according to reports, is now due before the courts until May 7th next.

Her sister has set up a GoFundMe page to raise money to pay for legal representation for her sister.

On Saturday, Holladay posted a note saying she had spoken to Ward and that her sister, though depressed, was taking comfort from expressions of concern about her case.

“She shared that, although she can’t speak with the majority of the women in there because most don’t speak English, they have been giving each other support and there are lots of tears and hugs between the women.”

Kenneth Cook McKnight, who went to high school with Ward in Sacramento, California, said she had been living legally in the US for more than 30 years.

“She had travelled multiple times back and forth to Ireland to see family over the years and never had a problem, until now, and obviously what is different now is the current political climate here, and the administration.”

US Representative Jimmy Panetta, a Democrat from California, said in a statement it was “unimaginable that a reportedly expunged, decades-old crime could be used as justification for deporting a legal permanent resident who is a productive member of our community.”

As a former gang prosecutor, he said, he understood the need to remove hardened criminals from communities, but Ward’s detention for crimes that have been expunged was “unacceptable and unfathomable”.

The Washington state facility where Ward is being held is one of the largest immigration prisons in the US, according to the Northwest Immigration Rights Project website.

The facility can hold 1,575 inmates and is run for ICE by the GEO Group, a publicly-quoted corporation with its headquarters in Florida that provides prisons and mental health facilities and other services to government clients.

I suppose there are some people who think middle aged Irish immigrants who have been in the U.S since they were teenagers should be deported because of a decades old drug offense. After all, they’re deporting 4 year old American cancer patients without blinking an eye. But many of Trump’s followers should think twice about all this because if he gets his way he’ll be able to deport many more American citizens for similar offenses if he feels like it. And that includes a whole lot of MAGAmericans and their families.

Brexit On Steroids

“The lessons of Brexit are beginning to be applied to the United States … When you break off or substantially rupture trade relationships with your major trading partners, Canada included – the most important trading partner of the United States … You end up with slower growth, higher inflation, higher interest rates, volatility, weaker currency, a weaker economy. We’re seeing the early stages of that in the United States”

As a reminder, Carney is formerly the head of Canada’s central bank and was the first foreigner in history to be tapped as the head of the Bank of England. It was the aftermath of the Brexit debacle and they needed an expert.

As head of Britain’s central bank, Carney ran the country’s monetary policy. In this he was independent of the government, though the Bank is required to support the government’s economic policy.

Carney’s tenure on Threadneedle Street, from 2013 to 2020, coincided with the full drama of Brexit – from the vote to leave the EU in 2016 to Britain’s departure in 2020.

His dire warnings about the financial risks won him the admiration of Remainers and the distrust of Brexiteers, who accused him of exceeding his apolitical remit. Influential Conservatives, including Margaret Thatcher’s former finance chief, Nigel Lawson, called for his resignation.

His predecessor at the Bank, Mervyn King, was far more upbeat about Brexit. The pair clashed – albeit indirectly and politely, each without naming the other – over Carney’s involvement in what King saw as fearmongering, and over King’s reluctance to bail out failing banks during the 2007 financial crisis.

In January 2016, five-and-a-half months before the referendum, Carney called the prospect of Britain voting to leave the “biggest domestic risk to financial stability.”

He also praised a now-forgotten “deal” that the then-Prime Minister, David Cameron, had struck with Brussels, intended to give Britain more wiggle-room as a full member of the EU. Carney said the agreement would “reinforce the positive impact of EU membership.”

His interventions prompted accusations from Brexiteers that Carney was “pro-EU,” which he denied.

One might say he had to deny it: Bank of England governors are meant to stay out of politics. One could also argue that Carney was calling the financial risks as he saw them, which was his job.

This is probably just bullshit but it’s intriguing.

The Revenge Tour On Day 100

Amongst all the news these last few days about the first hundred days of Trump 2.0 there has been little written about one of his most important agenda items and few questions about it by the various pollsters. We know that he’s underwater everywhere, starting with his flagship issues of the economy and immigration. To be sure, he ran on those issues and it’s important to know what America thinks about his performance so far. But Trump had another flagship issue that was a big part of his appeal to his most fervent followers:

The Washington Post/ABC/IPSOS poll asked what people think of Trump “taking measures against his political opponents” which doesn’t exactly address the question of “retribution” (some might think it’s about policy) but even then 53% disapprove to 33% approve. The NY Times Sienna poll asked whether Trump was exceeding his power (88% said yes) but that doesn’t address this specific question either. 57% agreed that Trump shouldn’t be allowed to withhold funding for universities in the Reuters Poll which can be considered an act of political retribution, but is one that comes more from the right wing extremists around Trump, such as the culture warriors who have been battling the allegedly liberal academy for decades.

The polls have looked at Trump’s gross abuse of power in some ways, such as the administration potentially ignoring court orders and ignoring congressional prerogatives and majorities really don’t like it. But as far as I can tell there were no questions asking people if they approve of Donald Trump’s vengeful actions against his political enemies. And that’s strange since there has been a boatload of them.

One of the first actions Trump took when he assumed office was to pardon all the January 6th rioters. He considered that a priority because he saw their prosecution as a direct attack on the Big Lie that he had actually won the 2020 election. He reportedly was offered some names of violent criminals who should be kept behind bars and he said “fuck it — release ’em all” which gives us some idea of his mindset when it comes to his personal vendettas.

He soon had the Justice Department fire 12 prosecutors who had been assigned to the cases and his Acting U.S. Attorney for Washington D.C., Ed Martin, (who happened to have been involved in the defense of some of the defendants) ordered an investigation into how the prosecutions were carried out. They were told that they had committed a “grave national injustice.” Martin has also notified one of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s deputies that he is investigating the “integrity and legality” of the Russia investigation suggesting that the Mueller team is in the crosshairs as well which is almost certainly the case since Trump has said for years that they should all be jailed.

Meanwhile, the administration has targeted one of his major antagonists, New York Attorney General Letitia James who led the civil prosecution against Trump for which he was found liable for nearly half a billion dollars over his fraudulent valuations of Trump Organization properties. The Federal Housing Finance Agency sent a criminal referral to the Department of Justice accusing James of mortgage fraud.

The administration has pulled the security clearances of numerous lawyers and former government officials Trump has personally called out for investigation including some that are now unable to work in their field. For instance, a lawyer Trump wanted investigated in the first term,Mark Zaid ,who represented the whistleblower raised concerns about Trump’s “perfect phone call” with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy which led to his first impeachment is no longer able to represent anyone who might want to access the whistleblower protections. The message this sends to anyone who might represent such a client is pretty obvious.

And then there are the law firms, some of which were singled out for representing people he doesn’t like and others who may have employed attorneys he has faced in court such as , Covington & Burling which assisted Special Counsel Jack Smith and Perkins Coie which represented the Dominion Voting Machine Company in its defamation suits against the right wing networks that spread Trump’s Big Lie. Others have been targeted supposedly for their “DEI policies” (which the administration fatuously asserts are violations of the Civil Rights Act) and have shamefully bent the knee by agreeing to do pro-bono work for the administration which Trump seems to believe makes them his personal legal servants. What it does do is take them off the table as defenders of anything that might benefit his enemies or threaten him. Luckily, some of these law firms are suing the administration rather than capitulate to his threats and the courts so far do not seems amused.

There are also the aforementioned universities most of which seemed poised to give Trump whatever he wanted but after a (supposed) mistaken moment of overreach the biggest of them all, Harvard, decided to fight back. That too is going to be decided in the courts. Then there is the media which he is personally suing in a couple of cases, has the FCC going after others and is banning their reporters from working inside the buildings in others.

He’s pulled the security details from anyone associated with the Biden family except the former president himself because he’s bound by law (and probably worries that could blow back on him when he finally leaves office.) And he’s singled out several people who worked in his former administration whom he sees as disloyal, starting with the former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley, who has had his security clearance removed despite still being under threat and is now under investigation by the Pentagon for “undermining the chain of command” under some kind of administrative action (Milley was preemptively pardoned by former president Joe Biden.)

Perhaps most ominously, Trump recently issued orders to the Department of Justice and Department of Homeland Security to investigate Trump’s former cybersecurity expert Chris Krebs and pulled the security clearances of everyone in the company he now works at as well. Krebs’ crime was to say that the 2020 election was secure, the truth. And Miles Taylor, Trump’s former Chief of Staff to the Department of Homeland Security Secretary who later revealed himself as the author of an infamous anonymous NY Times Op-ed which claimed that people inside the administration were keeping Trump in check is also the subject of a DHS investigation at the direction of the president. He’s targeting specific people now for serious criminal investigation.

That’s just the tip of the iceberg. The entire Department of Justice under the leadership of Attorney General Pam Bondi, is being turned into a Trump revenge machine. They’re even targeting judges whom she has declared to be “lowlevel leftists who are trying to dictate President Trump’s executive powers.” If an Attorney General using those words doesn’t make your blood run cold you’re not paying attention.

Trump promised to do this even in the face of pressure from his campaign and allies not to. He will not stop until and unless the courts tell him he has to. If they do say he’s gone too far the question then is whether he will once again abuse his power and defy them. Even a large majority of Republicans don’t want him to do that but considering all he’s done already we have to be prepared for the possibility that he may just say, “f” it as he did with the J6 pardons. His thirst for revenge is unslakable.

Salon

ICE Airways

The shackles are complimentary

Images via Wikipedia.

Don’t hold your breath waiting for a truth and reconcilation commission to detail the many crimes of the Trump 2.0 administration. The November 6 Committee tried that. A majority of voters last fall reelected the multiple felon and career con man anyway. The best I can hope for right now is for everyone associated with Trump 2.0 to carry pariah status to their graves. Pray they don’t take our republic with them.

That doesn’t mean Trump collaborators won’t face consequences in this world (if not the next). ProPublica last week revealed how Texas-based Avelo airlines could have its tax breaks and local support disappeared like the deportees it flies out of the country under contract to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE):

Connecticut’s attorney general has sent his second warning in a month to the low-cost carrier Avelo Airlines, telling the startup it has jeopardized tax breaks and other local support by agreeing to conduct deportation flights for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Democrats in the Connecticut legislature, meanwhile, are working to expand the state’s sanctuary law to penalize companies like Avelo for working with federal immigration authorities.

The backlash comes after Texas-based Avelo signed an agreement early this month to dedicate three of its 20 planes to carrying out deportation flights as part of the charter network known as ICE Air. It also follows a report by ProPublica, which Connecticut Attorney General William Tong cited in an April 8 letter to Avelo, revealing flight attendants’ unease over the treatment and safety of detainees on such flights. The concerns airline staffers raised included how difficult it could be to evacuate people wearing wrist and ankle shackles.

On the opposite coast, Californian protesters chanted, “Avelo has got to go” at the entrance to the Sonoma County Airport:

Dozens of activists lined the entrance of Charles M. Schulz Sonoma County Airport, urging people not to fly Avelo Airlines.

The budget carrier, which still serves Santa Rosa, is now facing backlash after announcing it would soon begin operating ICE deportation charter flights out of Arizona–an agreement made with the Trump Administration.

“We are asking folks not to give their money to anyone who is deporting individuals without due process of law,” said Laura Powell from Indivisible Sonoma County.

Demonstrators outside Tweed New Haven Airport protest Avelo Airlines participation in ICE deportation flights (April 17). Photo by Eric Song for Yale News .

“Due Process Not Profits”

Constitution State residents at Tweed New Haven Airport feel the same, NPR reported Tuesday morning:

REPORTER JOEL ROSE: Hundreds of protesters gathered outside the airport after the company announced a deal to operate deportation flights for ICE. John Lugo is an activist from New Haven who helped organize the demonstration.

JOHN LUGO: It’s outrageous. Like, a company that operates from New Haven, in one of the most welcoming cities for migrants, right now, they’re going to be making profits, like, deporting people back to their countries.

ROSE: Facing financial headwinds, Avelo struck a long-term deal to work with U.S. immigration and customs enforcement. The company says three of its planes will begin operating charter flights for ICE based in Arizona starting May 12. They’ll join the small fleet of ICE Air Operations carriers that try hard to keep out of the spotlight.

TOM CARTWRIGHT: There is no transparency, and that’s by design.

ROSE: That is 71-year-old Tom Cartwright, a former banking executive turned volunteer activist. Cartwright started tracking ICE Air using public flight tracking data during the first Trump administration. Now he’s become the go-to source for information about ICE flights. Every day, Cartwright says, between eight and 10 planes carry passengers in shackles and leg chains both inside the U.S. and on deportation flights around the globe. The system has worked roughly the same way under administrations of both parties. Cartwright says the airlines that operate these flights for ICE are subcontractors, usually private charter airlines that fly for many different clients.

Yale News:

Carrying signs such as “Due Process Not Profits” and “Don’t Let Your Family Vacation Support Family Separation,” a crowd of about 200 protesters booed and chanted as Avelo airplanes flew overhead. Stationed on the corner of Burr and Dean streets, the gathering was three times larger than the previous protest and included U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal LAW ’73, State Rep. Juan Candelaria and three New Haven alders. 

“You made a bad mistake, you made a political mistake, you made a legal mistake, you made a financial mistake and, most importantly, you made a moral mistake,” Blumenthal said at the event, referring to Avelo. Blumenthal condemned the Trump administration’s mass deportation campaign in his speech, criticizing the lack of due process and the use of Salvadoran prisons to house deportees.

Old-school Democrats believe that undefined “kitchen table” issues are what Americans care about most, not abstractions like constitutional provisions. Tell that to the NRA. Now that Trump 2.0 is disappearing residents seemingly at random, revoking visas of international students (then restoring them), deporting green card holders, jailing international travelers, and terrorizing its own citizens, suddenly abstractions like “due process of law” are very, very relevant.

* * * * *

Have you fought dictatorship today?

May Day 2025 | 50501 site, May 1 (TOIMORROW)
The Resistance Lab
Choose Democracy
Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink
You Have Power
Chop Wood, Carry Water
Thirty lonely but beautiful actions
Attending a Protest Surveillance Self-Defense

Homegrown Terrorists

Found them

Like their boss in the Oval Office, none of the 20 gun-wielding agents who broke through “Marissa’s” door in Oklahoma City will take responsibility for terrorizing her and her daughters. Nor will their agencies. Right house. Wrong residents. Didn’t matter. They hustled the family outside into the rain in their underwear before tearing the house apart in their search:

“We just moved here from Maryland,” she said. “We’re citizens. That’s what I kept saying. We’re citizens.”

She said the agents didn’t care.

“They were very dismissive, very rough, very careless,” she said. “I kept pleading. I kept telling them we weren’t criminals. They were treating us like criminals. We were here by ourselves. We didn’t do anything.”

A little rough

“Marisa said the men identified themselves as federal agents with the U.S. Marshals, ICE, and the FBI,” reported local KFOR. Contacted by reporters, none of the agencies would acknowledge being there.

They tore the house apart and confiscated phones, laptops, and the family’s cash life savings as “evidence.”

“I said, ‘when are we going to get our stuff back?’ They said it could be days or it could be months,” Marisa said. She has no idea which agency took her belongings or how to get them back.

“I told them before they left, I said you took my phone. We have no money. I just moved here,” she said. “I have to feed my children. I’m going to need gas money. I need to be able to get around. Like, how do you just leave me like this? Like an abandoned dog.”

Before they left, Marisa said one of the agents made a comment.

“One of them said, ‘I know it was a little rough this morning,’” she said. “It was so denigrating. That you do all of this to a family, to women, your fellow citizens. And it was a little rough? You literally traumatized me and my daughters for life. We’re going to have to go get help or get over this somehow.”

I think we’ve found some of Donald Trump’s homegrown terrorists. They work for him.

Journalist Radley Balko commented on Bluesky:

I’ve watched too many of these raids to count. This one is one of the most infuriating in recent memory.

Appropriate that we learn about it on the same day SCOTUS hears oral arguments for a case that may remove the last remaining way to hold federal agents accountable for this kind of terror.

Balko refers to Martin v. U.S:

The Supreme Court on Tuesday morning was sympathetic to the victims of a “wrong house” raid in 2017, with several justices expressing surprise at the federal government’s efforts to contend that the actions of FBI agents were shielded from liability because their acts were discretionary. But it was not clear whether that their skepticism of the agents’ conduct would lead to the result that the victims were seeking.

Read the rest at SCOTUSblog. It will sound familiar. (For some reason the original page link isn’t working.)

Rachel Maddow Tuesday night, rather than run with the expected “Trump’s first 100 days” story, used this Oklahoma City raid as emblematic of “the shambolic mess” he’s made of the country in a mere 100 days. It is “all you need to know about this president, and his character, and the character of his leadership, and the government he runs, and what he is doing to this country.”

You feel it. In your guts. Maybe not like Marisa. Not yet.

“I just couldn’t understand how is this happening to us?” Marisa told KFOR.

We are all asking that question. As is the rest of the world. How are Americans allowing it to happen? How are their “leaders” in Congress allowing Trump to wipe his butt with the U.S. Constitution and our vaunted rights and liberties, yours and mine?

Canadian singer-songwriter Bruce Cockburn recorded “If I Had a Rocket Launcher” in 1984 about Guatemala. It always seemed like a tragic story about a violent dictatorship far, far away. Not so much this morning.

* * * * *

Have you fought dictatorship today?

May Day 2025 | 50501 site, May 1 (TOMORROW)
The Resistance Lab
Choose Democracy
Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink
You Have Power
Chop Wood, Carry Water
Thirty lonely but beautiful actions
Attending a Protest Surveillance Self-Defense

Oh My God, He Doesn’t Know …

You have to watch this whole thing. Trump clearly does not know that the picture of Abrego Garcia’s hand was photoshopped with the letters MS13. He thinks it was real.

Moran tried to explain to him that it was literally fake and he’s totally clueless.

Look at this! Would any sentient person think it’s real???

You have to assume that his people told the addled old man that it was real and he believed it. (I wrote about this when he posted that idiotic picture.)

He’s obviously being run by people like Stephen Miller who are happy to indulge his worst instincts and take advantage of his ignorance and senility. This is a total embarrassment.

Update:

This by Tim Miller is well worth watching: