Becoming terrorists

Republicans enjoy using the Jim Crow-era Democratic Party’s support for segregation as proof that their embrace of white nationalism is not worth mentioning. It’s bothsidesism as a “get out of racism free” card.
There was a time post-September 11 when the GOP’s bogieman du jour was from somewhere vaguely Middle East or Muslim. We were coached to become a nation of bedwetters convinced that bearded men with long, curved knives were coming to kill us all in our beds. We packed heat and opened fire on anything that went bump in the night either at home or abroad.
Now it’s anyone nonwhite. I’d missed that Aliya Rahman, 43, the disabled American citizen dragged from her car in Minneapolis is Bangladeshi. It went by fast in her testimony on Tuesday. She mentioned seeing a combat knife come at her and fearing that the agent meant to harm her. Instead he cut off her seat belt so agents could drag her out of the car and onto her face.
Marimar Martinez survived after being shot five times during an ICE assault in Chicago. She also testified. We’d heard previously about the agent who shot her bragging about five shots and seven holes. But on Tuesday, we heard a new detail.
Martinez testified in Congress Tuesday about how she was shot after she followed an agent’s car in Chicago while trying to warn her neighbors. DHS initially claimed that when the officers exited their vehicle, Martinez tried to run them over, “forcing the officers to fire defensively.” She was charged with felony assault of a federal officer despite ending up in the hospital herself.
In her testimony, Martinez revealed a new detail about what happened after she was shot.
“After being at the hospital for less than three hours, I was discharged from the hospital into custody of the FBI. As we left the hospital, I was escorted out through the back in a wheelchair. I observed over dozens of Border Patrol agents waiting outside the hospital,” Martinez said. “One of the agents came up to me with his cell phone and took a photograph of me. It was the same agent who had previously kept coming in and out [of my hospital] room, and I had to repeatedly tell him to leave. I told him I did not consent … but he did not care. It still haunts me that this agent has my photo on his phone. Was this the agent that shot me? Was this a trophy for him?”
A couple of decades ago we were supposed to fear foreigners coming to coming to kill us in our beds with their long, curved knives. Under the Trump-Miller ethnic cleansing effort, it’s anyone foreign-looking, citizens and non-citizens alike, who must fear that amped-up, masked agents of our own government are coming for us. Dehumanizing us as “bodies,” as Rahman testified, to be harvested, counted, and warehoused.
Michelle Goldberg writes:
Judge Ana Reyes did not have to go far to discover Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s animus toward Haitians. She just had to read her social media feed. “I am recommending a full travel ban on every damn country that’s been flooding our nation with killers, leeches and entitlement junkies,” Noem wrote on X in December. She added, “WE DON’T WANT THEM. NOT ONE.”
Reyes, a Federal District Court judge in Washington, cited Noem’s post at the very beginning of a blistering opinion issued Monday night preventing the administration from ending Temporary Protected Status for Haitians, at least for now. That status was due to expire on Tuesday, rendering more than 350,000 Haitians who are now legally living and working in America undocumented overnight.
Goldberg visited Springfield, Ohio, with a population nearly one-quarter Haitian. (You know, the subhumans allegedly eating cats and dogs?) The Trump-Miller plan to void their Temporary Protected Status (TPS) and round them up for deportation leaves them a community living in fear:
On Sunday evening, Rose Goute, a Haitian restaurant, was almost deserted. “People stay home,” said Jean Philistin, a 50-year-old who was there picking up takeout. “People are scared.” He said he was less frightened than many others because he became a citizen a few years ago, though he wasn’t sure how much that would matter. “The worst thing is, since you’ve got an accent, or since you’re Black, they can stop you for no reason.”
Philistin had been a civil engineer back in Haiti and now worked refurbishing houses. He has two teenage children, both born in America. “I don’t know why they hate my community,” he said sadly.
I’d call that a rhetorical question.
In a 2005 op-ed about the Bush II “extraordinary rendition” and torture regime, I asked whether Americans were “fighting terrorists, breeding them, or becoming them.” We have our answer.








