Mid June Roundup

At long last, my tremendous overtime has ended. For reference, I was working 70-75 hour weeks for a while there. Not the most fun. In the meantime, a lot of other not the most fun things have been happening, as well. So I’ll try and do a roundup of everything I recall over the past while.


First off, Kilmar Abrego Garcia has been returned to the United States! After hemming and hawing and saying it couldn’t be done, and it was beyond the powers of the President, and Bukele snickering up his sleeve that we were all whiners… he’s been returned to the United States.

Of course, now the DoJ is prosecuting him for human trafficking, because we can’t have a guy embarrass us without trying to ruin his life a second time. I don’t believe these charges for a second, because of who’s issued them and the timing surrounding them… But even if he is guilty, the man was and is entitled to due process.


Plenty of other political targets remain in limbo, like Mahmoud Khalil. And DHS continues to play stupid three card monte with the people it’s nabbing in these cases, shuffling them off to other states and claiming “Oh, your injunction is invalid because you filed it 30 minutes after they left the state and no we’re not telling you where we took them”, ad nauseam. Same shit they pulled with Rümeysa Öztürk.

Edit: My comment on Mahmoud Khalil is now incorrect. As of 30 minutes ago – about 6 hours after I initially posted this – they freed Khalil.


When asked if he would obey an order to deploy the army and fire on protestors, Pete Hegseth laughed at the Senator asking him the question. Piece of shit. He also said he wouldn’t obey any court order that didn’t come from the Supreme Court. Presumably this is because he knows the federal government will appeal any injunction against him, but even so… sorry, guy, it doesn’t work that way. Sure, he may factually be able to get away with it, but hopefully people will remember it when it comes time to nail his scrotum to a board, if we ever get to that point.


The big big news of late, at least for me: protests in Los Angeles. And yes, hundreds of other cities, thousands if you count towns. The No Kings day protests.

The lead up to the Saturday was spicy – lots of gatherings at Pershing Square, and lots of cops. Including riot suppression squads literally outside my front door, since I live downtown. In typical LAPD fashion, overreaction to show the plebians who’s boss. But the day itself?

I’ve been to a lot of protests over the years, and this was easily one of the most peaceful I’ve ever seen. No shouting of angry statements, no bullhorns, no demands. Just a peaceful set of marches. Hell, we even had groups of people playing music while marching – like a couple of trumpets, two saxaphones, some drums, etc. It was a very party atmosphere. Same all over Los Angeles – Santa Monica, Long Beach, Culver City, Hollywood. Everything went well. There were Mexican dancers on City Hall’s steps, stuff like that.

Up until the LAPD and LASD decided to play cowboy and break up two groups of protestors because they just couldn’t leave well enough alone. It turned into an absolute shitshow that escalated very rapidly. Why it escalated is indicative of the quality policing we have come to expect here in the City of Angels. Reporter Chad Loder – and confirmed by me independently via police scanner recordings – the LAPD were going to start breaking up the protest. So they fired tear gas. Well, the LASD hadn’t masked up against gas, so they opened fire on the LAPD with less-lethal rounds. Who then predictably fired back. And then everything turned against the civilians.

I can verify this escalating quickly from absolutely zero violence on the part of protestors, because I drove through it right when shit kicked off. No shit. I was on my way back from El Super in Boyle Heights, but had to take surface streets because the cops still hadn’t opened up the freeway on and off ramps, and ran smack dab into the middle of shit right as it went sideways, on Temple Street.

Kind of a pucker moment. All I wanted to do was get home with my groceries.

Other than that, though, and the overreaction by LAPD earlier in the week, there were no riots. Nothing burning down. Anyone who tells you Los Angeles had to have the Nation Guard brought in or it’d have burned down is lying to you. Full stop. Lying. The only people escalating shit to the level of a riot were the LAPD, and they only did it twice, in very limited circumstances.

We still have ICE or ICE bounty hunters (verdict is out on which we’re dealing with at any given time) masked up and refusing to identify, snatching people off the streets. Including citizens. Including arresting city officials in New York for assaulting them. Of course, he was released later that day because video clearly shows him NOT assaulting them, and audio includes them colluding to arrest him just because. So shit isn’t all good out there. It’s still totally fucked. But at least the people of Los Angeles can get together to say “Hell no!” without turning it into a shitshow by themselves.

And, as far as I can tell, the National Guard and Marines that Trump’s deployed to the city are essentially sitting on their asses with no real orders other than to defend federal buildings.


And now they’re talking about maybe dropping a nuke on Iran.

Fucking wonderful.

ICE Revokes Immigration Status for Students; Newsom is a Dirtbag

This morning, it was discovered that Immigrations and Customs Enforcement has been revoking visas for students across the country manually, rather than leaving that decision to universities, as is the norm. While Zeteo suggests the students and universities were not notified, this does not seem to be the case. In an article I haven’t linked, several hundred received notification to self-deport this morning. It is unclear if more visas were revoked than the 300 Zeteo reports, but those 300 seem to have been notified.

These visa revocations are tied to the visa provision preventing “interference in foreign policy”. In the cases Zeteo and other outlets reviewed, this interference was little more than social media activity. In some cases, merely sharing a post critical of US policy was sufficient for revocation.


California Governor Gavin Newsom decried the ‘toxicity’ of the Democratic Party on Friday, in an interview with Bill Maher. He said the party was ‘too judgmental’ and that it ‘needs to mature’. Rich words coming from a guy who’s busily doing a total 180 on positions held for years, probably in an effort to swing right in prep for a run for President. For instance, after hosting noted white supremacist and shitbag Charlie Kirk on his podcast, he performed an encore lap by inviting Steve Bannon on.

Newsom’s descent into dirtbag is well underway; it’s hard to exaggerate just how much he’s alienating his base in California in his efforts to court the entirely mythical swing Republican vote. Any Californian can tell you, the Republicans in this state hate his ass passionately – a drive up or down I-5 will plaster your eyes with anti-Newsom signage. Even Democrats in California have basically only been tolerating him, since he’s largely ineffectual. He exemplifies the bog-standard Big Donor Democrat stereotype, with no real policy positions at any given moment other than what’s politically expedient. He’s also totally in bed with PG&E, and has utterly failed to reform them after the massive fires their collapsing infrastructure has caused.

Democrats want a fighter and someone who will stand up to fascists, not someone who will invite them on to their podcast, agree with them, and be the most milquetoast politician while doing so.


In Wisconsin, Appellate court judge Andrew Voigt denied AG Josh Kaul’s lawsuit which is attempting to stop Elon Musk’s 1 million dollar voting giveaway; Kaul has already appealed the ruling. Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to find Voigt’s rationale for his refusal.


In international news, Ecuador is preparing for the arrival of United States military aid in Manta by building a new military base there. This is of particular interest to me, as I have a lot of friends in Latin America, and I work with a lot of people whose families are from Latin America. Ecuador is in a somewhat precarious position both geographically and politically. Geographically, coastal cities like Guayaquil are perfect for international narco trade, and former president Rafael Correa’s closure of the previous base in Manta encouraged the narcos to move into the country from Peru and Colombia. This was further exacerbated by FARC ending operations in Colombia, which was kind of policing the southern border with Ecuador. My friends in Colombia (Medellin and Barranquilla) have said the government is still making life difficult for the Colombian narcos, so moving their goods through Ecuador is easier.

Currently President Daniel Noboa is facing off in a special election with candidate Luisa Gonzalez, who’s the protégé of former president Correa. I suspect this base is a play to swing votes toward himself and away from Gonzalez, as the country is still dealing with some serious gang violence.