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Two Days Talking to People Looking for Jobs at ICE | Online Only | n 1 | Yanis Varoufuckice

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On Thursday and Friday of last week I attended a Department of Homeland Security job fair at the Dulles Expo Center in Chantilly, Virginia. I learned about the event while browsing the DHS website in order to find the phone number of someone who’d been detained by ICE. A pop-up ad linked to an EventBrite page, with free tickets readily available.

Customs and Border Patrol, the Coast Guard, and the Secret Service were all recruiting at the event, but ICE was the main draw. Far more applicants stood in line to submit their resumes for deportation officer than for any other position on offer in the cavernous room.

Naturally there were a large number of law enforcement types hanging around the convention—men with military fades, moisture-wicking shirts, and tattoos of the bible and the constitution and eagles and flags distended across their arms. But there were also a handful of women ICE applicants and a lot of men of color. The deportation officer applicant pool was, I felt, shockingly diverse—one might say it looked like America. The whole place looked and felt like America.

There were tactical trucks, motorcycles, and drones; an ambulance, a Humvee, and a kind of paddy wagon that could accommodate eighty or ninety people, all parked inside the Expo. At rest in curtained-off and carpeted recruitment areas, they loomed over the supportive agency staffers there to “triage” resumes and offer encouragement to prospective employees. The ICE recruitment area sported two enormous trucks similar to those used to menace protestors in Los Angeles. When an agent lifted the curtain, I saw piles of Starbucks tumblers hidden behind their wheels.

At the CBP booth, a glowing snowmobile was parked next to a teepee made of synthetic fabrics and metal poles where applicants could sit and charge their phones. Some of them looked a little frightened, less tough than people in the photographs around them, the diverse officers framed in siren lights, shot from below to emphasize their solemnity and certainty of purpose. The recruiter for the air marshals told a crowd of applicants they shouldn’t bother applying if they were fat. “No one likes a fat cop,” she said. She drank Pink Monster Ultra Rosá and had multiple dreamcatcher forearm tattoos.

She told us not to apply if we couldn’t do pushups and sit-ups, or if we were unprepared to run one and half miles. Candidates who “punched their girlfriend or boyfriend” also need not apply, she said. But candidates should also show empathy and emphasize what was unique about them in interviews. “Maybe you saw a car on fire in Colorado and you threw blankets onto it. That’s great. Say you were on a SWAT team in Albuquerque. That’s also great,” she said.

The air marshals were the only group to have a dedicated, detailed presentation—the rest relied on pre-recorded talks or videos. CBP’s video looked like it was made by professionals—ICE’s, with its “Stencil” font titles and royalty-free photographs of stainless steel, had the feeling of a grade-school history project, the kind that little boys use as an excuse to shoot each other with Airsoft guns.

The ICE video began with jittery, sepia-toned photographs of the founding fathers and the Federalist Papers, jumped ahead to immigrants arriving at Ellis Island, and from there to mugshots of the 9/11 attackers. Though the narration was inaudible, I believe that 9/11 was cited to justify the deployment of the men who appeared onscreen next, the ICE agents arresting meatpackers with their hairnets still on.

A solitary fascist marched through the center of the frame even as the setting changed around him—from secondhand store, to airport, to warehouse. He was everywhere, protected by his flak vest and holstered pistol.

The banality of these settings juxtaposed with the grandiosity of mission reminded me of a TikTok I had seen recently, which compared the way men and women move through the world. In the video a couple walks through a mall while a series of subtitles announce their divergent thoughts. The man, ever on his guard, sizes up the threat posed by each passerby, commenting to himself, “I can take him,” “I can take him,” or “I’d need backup,” depending on the size of the individual in question. The woman just examines the shop windows, thinking things like “That’s so cute!” or “I wish I could buy that.”

Although obviously unrealistic as a way of experiencing a mall, the video suggested that populating one’s field of vision with imaginary threats might offer a sense of purpose, which life in suburban America does not always provide.

One of the ICE applicants I spoke with seemed to have an insatiable desire for conflict in line with this hypothesis. All his life, he said, he had hoped to fight wars in Iraq or Afghanistan. He’d joined the army hoping to fulfill this desire. But our foreign wars had wound down by the time of his enlistment, and he never got a chance to fight abroad.

He said his wife had almost been assaulted in Texas, and when she’d called the police they arrested a man who turned out to be an “illegal alien” and who was promptly deported. He said he’d seen videos of a member of the Taliban getting into an argument at a fast-food restaurant in California (I couldn’t find any evidence of this—not even as a conspiracy), and that he wanted to join ICE to protect his family.

“I learned all these skills in the army—smash and grabs, site exploitation—and never got to use them,” he said. “So I’m here to kind of do what I learned to do over there, but this time here, defending my country.”

Previously impressed by the connections between war and domestic policy elucidated by the historians Kathleen Belew and Stuart Schrader, I found this man’s account almost embarrassingly transparent. This was the most straightforward articulation I’d ever heard of someone bringing the war home.

Other applicants offered similar explanations for their motives.

There was the young, taciturn southerner managing a batting cage near New Orleans, and the pimply youth from Kentucky, churning out Yahoo Finance content for twenty dollars an hour. Both said they were tired and bored. The latter said his father had been in ICE, but he “didn’t really know what he did.”

I spoke to a gregarious New York police officer who was fed up with patrolling Times Square and all “the savages” there. Another applicant said he was sick of installing office furniture in properties subleased by the United States Marines.

A blind man I spoke to, who was hoping to find a data-centric position with ICE, said he was sick of his current job collecting child support payments from delinquent parents. At present, he said, his “hands were tied” because the law in his state forbade him from sending in sheriffs to collect money from deadbeat dads. In a lilting, basso voice, he told me that “in college, I wrote several papers about the harms of illegals in America.”

The last applicant I spoke to said he didn’t care much about the politics of ICE—it was just that he thought his taxes shouldn’t be used to buy school supplies for “illegal alien children.” What he was really interested in, he said, was parlaying his wages as a deportation officer into buying Airbnbs. “My classmates came up in the same environment as me,” he said, “but now they’re off posting photographs of Lamborghinis on Instagram, standing on balconies of waterfront apartments.”

His dad had also been in ICE and had broken down the doors of a Queens family that had just sat down to dinner when he stormed in. They all happened to be wearing Obama shirts and hats and were eating off of Obama dishware. Once, in the early part of his career, the man had gotten to travel to Southeast Asia on various deportation flights and had sent his son photographs of a beautiful waterfall in Cambodia. “I was like, what the fuck dad?” the young man said. “I thought you were supposed to be deporting people!”

The prospect of travel excited this applicant. And in fact over and over the DHS agents at the fair emphasized how it was the best part of their job.

A longtime ICE agent said he had accompanied undocumented immigrants on deportation flights to more than fifty countries and stayed in numerous three- and four-star hotels. A White House rooftop sniper said that she had had “amazing experiences in foreign countries” and that the camaraderie of her sniper team reminded her of her college volleyball team.

A CBP agent in Arizona said his favorite part of the job was riding horses through the mountains. The staff of the EMT Hazardous Agent Mitigation & Medical Emergency Response team (Hammer) said that he traveled with his ambulance all over the world, loading it into massive C17 airplanes and then sleeping beside it midair. He said it was “almost like camping.”

The motivating force behind American career fascism would appear to be wanderlust. My conversations with prospective Enforcement and Removal Operation officers tended to follow the familiar script of engagement with the most banal people on Tinder, the kinds of people who post airplane emojis in their bios. Granting that the banality of evil, as an explanation, has itself become banal, it was hard to know what else to make of all this. The US is filled with “pretty nice guys” who are ready to inflict, who have already inflicted, senseless and life-shattering violence on innocent, impoverished people.

I went outside for about an hour and found a small bench next to a manmade lake just beyond the expo parking lot. The lake was filled with geese diving for food in the water, then bobbing up, heads covered in mud and weeds.

Looking behind me, I realized that that the body of water was connected to the local offices of Northrop Grumman, which supplies Israel with the Longbow missile delivery system for its Apache attack helicopters, and laser weapon delivery systems for its fighter jets. Across the highway was an enormous company headquarters called BigBear AI, which, as it turned out, was yet another defense contractor, lately being sued for defrauding investors.

This is a disgusting country, I thought, irredeemable visually, psychically, morally, and ethically, and whatever is likable about our people’s warm patter does not in any way forgive what we have done to the world. Furthermore, it isn’t hard to bring politeness and evil into view at the same time.

I could not bring myself to return to the convention. I walked and walked. I bought some food at a Walmart and then spoke to a man in the parking lot who had sawed a square hole into the trunk of his truck and inserted a window-unit air conditioner inside of it and attached the A/C to a generator. His clothes were drying on the ground.

“Is your car’s A/C broken?” I asked. “Yep!” he replied, in a cheerful voice. “It’s broken!”

In the Uber on the way home I had a rambling, incomprehensible conversation with a man who told me that working at a car dealership was harder than fighting in a war and that he had the facts to prove it. He said that his ex-manager had been trained to jump out of airplanes but had had a heart attack because of how hard it was to sell cars in Virginia. After this he added, for no reason, “I’m a normal person. When I go to Walmart, I look for the beer in the exact middle of the price range.”

Back at the convention the next morning, a Border Patrol agent was walking the agency’s emotional support dog around the conference perimeter. Her name was Willow, her handler said, and she was 5 years old.

She was giant and soft, with impeccable fur, and had already flown to sixteen different countries. She belonged to a special, docile German breed called the Leonburger and her job was to confer warmth to Border Patrol agents on the verge of committing suicide. She would work as long as she wanted to work and was hungry for lunch, the handler said.

Willow’s presence elicited coos of sympathy from agents whose job it is to impart unshakeable traumas onto the wretched of the earth. This same sympathy was later extended to a disturbing Department of Defense “BigDog” robot named Confidence, whose handler directed it to waggle its hips and peer up inquisitively at onlookers. Its thin frame resembled a miniature fuselage with imitation deer legs attached to the bottom. Its hooves looked like the wheels of an office chair, and it had a spinning camera on top of its ass.

Apart from its dog-like face, there was nothing creaturely about it, and even this mild resemblance soon disappeared. A DHS agent placed a BODYARMOR SuperDrink on the ground and the dog retrieved it by opening up its entire face to become a mechanical claw.

Back at the ICE booth, a lone protester was at last present, asking a simple question. At the deportation officer recruiting table, he asked the agent, “Have you read Eichmann in Jerusalem?”

“Do you know what the Nazis said?” he asked. “They said they were just following orders. How do you think of your own work in this context?” He pressed ahead: “I’m just trying to figure out if this position is right for me. Do you think it’s right to separate people from their families, their mothers and fathers from their children, hard-working people who pose no threat? Do you think that’s right?”

The agent demurred, turned away. She looked shy and frazzled. He asked her again, “Have you read Eichmann in Jerusalem?” But at this point another agent—a thick-necked, red-faced pig—walked up to the protester and leaned into his face in an effort at intimidation. I am not certain I heard the next part correctly, but I think the man hissed: “Eichmann in WHAT?”


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sarcozona
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The virus that won’t quit: new research reveals how SARS-CoV-2 evolves

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2025-06-10T09:30:00+10:00

New research could help predict future COVID-19 variants.

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Carney shows his hand on infrastructure and trade bill

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The procedural mystery behind the prime minister’s plan to rush his treasured legislation has been unveiled. Now it’s Parliament’s play.
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Meta AI searches made public - but do all its users realise?

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Fetal homicide is the new Roe | MetaFilter

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Following the example of the police, this CBS news story about the charges calls the fetal remains a "baby boy." The coroner's report estimated gestational age to be 20 weeks 6 days. (Chance of viability at 20-21 weeks is under 5%.) The daughter sent text messages saying "it's still moving" and the friend she sent the texts to turned her in to police.

The charges against the mother, Shannon Jones: endangering the welfare of children, corruption of minors, conspiracy, and concealing the death of a child. Against her daughter: concealing the death of a child and abuse of corpse.

Had appropriate care been available, none of this would have happened. Yet police weaponized the Planned Parenthood clinic's policy of only doing first-trimester abortions as proof for the endangering the welfare of children charge against her mother, noting in their arrest report that she purchased the abortion pills for her daughter, "despite the two having already been told that she was too far along in her pregnancy to receive an abortion."

People who get abortions or miscarry are increasingly being charged with things like "abuse of a corpse." Brittany Watts miscarried and was charged with felony abuse of a corpse; a grand jury dismissed the case in January 2024 and she is suing the hospital and doctors for insufficient care and conspiring with police. Selena Maria Chandler-Scott was charged with concealing the death of another person and abandoning a dead body, though charges were dropped. Amari Marsh was jailed and accused of homicide by child abuse, followed by 13 months of house arrest before a grand jury declined to charge her; an autospy showed her child, born in the second trimester and living briefly after birth, died of a chlamydia infection Marsh didn't know she had (a heartbreaking detail: "She keeps her daughter’s ashes on a bookshelf in her bedroom.").

Drug use is often used to charge people who lose their pregnancies, starting with the 2001 case of Regina McKnight, who served 8 years for having a stillborn child who tested positive for cocaine. In 2021, Brittney Poolaw was sentenced to four years in prison for first-degree manslaughter after miscarrying in a hospital, because she was a drug user; similarly, Chelsea Becker spent a year and a half in jail before charges were dropped, for murder charges after she experienced a stillbirth and tested positive for drugs. Same for Brooke Shoemaker who is serving 18 years for chemical endangerment causing death (the coroner, an elected official with no medical training, listed methamphetamine as the baby’s cause of death on the death certificate after speaking to a pathologist unconnected to the case who never examined the body).

In the year after Dobbs, at least 210 pregnant people were criminally charged for pregnancy-related conduct (pdf). Mary Ziegler, a law professor at the University of California, Davis, spoke with PBS about the Watts case and said:

The U.S. anti-abortion movement's goal from its — really since the 1960s onward has been not just the undoing of a right to choose abortion, but the recognition of a fetus or an unborn child as a rights-holding person. And in pursuit of that goal, they have sought to write this idea of a fetus as a rights-holding person into as many areas of law as possible. The ultimate goal here is essentially to make the law of abortion, which doesn't treat a fetus as a rights-holding person, or the law of the Constitution, the interpretation of the Constitution that doesn't treat a fetus as a rights-holding person, an outlier, right, to make it weirder and weirder to say, well, this fetus doesn't have constitutional rights, but we treat it as a person for the purposes of abusing a corpse. We treat it as a person for the purposes of fetal homicide law, or wrongful death law, or intestacy law, to sort of put incremental pressure on a conservative Supreme Court to move toward the recognition of personhood. So this is very much playing the long game. This is not a movement that thinks it's going to get the recognition of fetal personhood through Congress or through the Supreme Court in the near term.

But it's worth remembering, of course, that it took 50 years to undo Roe v. Wade. So I think this, in some ways, for the anti-abortion movement is the new Roe v. Wade. It's the next 50 years.

Jessica Valenti, a reporter who covers reproductive rights in the US, notes in her Substack an "uptick in criminalization efforts: an increase in pregnancy-related arrests, bills and ‘studies’ designed to make more of those arrests possible, and a constant stream of messaging trial balloons to test just how outraged—or apathetic—Americans will be." She also mentions that if you have thoughts about criminalizing Jones' daughter's pregnancy outcome, you can contact Republican District Attorney Heather Adams, who says, "I want to be abundantly clear that these defendants are not being charged with performing an abortion—as the law prevents us from doing—but for their actions after the abortion." at 717-299-8100. (Emphasis mine.) Or you can reach out to your state and federal legislators.

The Jezebel story notes: "People who need assistance self-managing a miscarriage or abortion can call the Miscarriage + Abortion Hotline at (833) 246-2632 for confidential medical support, or the Repro Legal Helpline at (844) 868-2812 for confidential legal information and advice."

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Gaza doctor and son evacuated after husband and nine children killed in Israeli strike | Israel-Gaza war | The Guardian

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A Palestinian doctor whose husband and nine of her 10 children were killed by an Israeli strike has been evacuated from Gaza, bound for Italy with her only surviving child.

Alaa al-Najjar, a paediatrician, and her badly wounded 11-year-old son, Adam, are due to be taken by ambulance with other critically-ill patients and family members to an airport in Eilat on the Red Sea and then flown to Milan on a plane chartered by the Italian government.

Najjar’s family were killed on 23 May, when their family home in Khan Younis was bombed by Israeli forces. Her husband, Hamdi, had just dropped her at the town’s Nasser hospital where they both worked and had gone home to look after the children when the building was bombed.

Najjar was at the hospital when the charred remains of seven of her children were brought in. Two were found later in the rubble and Hamdi died a few days later of his injuries. Adam was the sole survivor. His hand had to be amputated and he suffered severe burns on his body.

“I am not strong. Everyone says I am, they call me a hero because I keep going, but I want the right not to be strong,” Najjar told La Repubblica newspaper before her evacuation.

“I am a woman whose children were killed, nearly all of them, when all I ever wanted was to protect them. Not just their bodies – I wanted to protect their feelings too. If God allowed this tragedy, there must be a reason. There has to be. But I don’t know what it is.”

Italy’s foreign minister, Antonio Tajani, said Alaa and Adam al-Najjar would be accompanied on the flight to Milan by one of Adam’s aunts and four cousins, as well as the other patients and their families.

In all, Tajani said, 80 Palestinians from Gaza would be flown on three planes to Milan, where they were due to arrive in the evening.

Video footage posted on social media on Wednesday morning showed Najjar, veiled in black, embracing friends and relatives before boarding an ambulance alongside Adam, who waved from the front seat. His left arm was heavily strapped and bandaged.

Their evacuation was arranged by the Italian foreign ministry after an appeal for help from Adam’s uncle Ali al-Najjar, was published in La Repubblica.

The Najjar children killed were seven-month-old Sidar, two-year-old Luqman, Sadeen, aged three, Rifan, five, Raslan, seven, Jubran, eight, Eve, nine, Rakan, 10, and Yahya, 12.

“I gave birth to them, I loved them, and I raised them for as long as I could,” their mother said. “They were happy and beautiful before the war.”

The killing of a family of young children focused international attention once more on the toll Israel’s military campaign has taken on young Palestinians in Gaza. More than 16,000 children have been killed and another 34,000 wounded, according to local and UN estimates, since the conflict began on 7 October 2023, triggered by a Hamas attack on Israel.

“I hope to write a new chapter of our life in Italy, but in a different book. I’ll do everything I can. After the surgery, Adam will learn Italian and go to school,” Najjar said.

Asked by his mother about his hopes for the future, Adam said he wanted to “live in a beautiful place”.

“A beautiful place is a place where there are no bombs. In a beautiful place the houses are not broken and I go to school,” he added. “Schools have desks, the kids study their lessons but then they go play in the courtyard and nobody dies.

“A beautiful place is where they operate on my arm and my arm works again. In a beautiful place my mother is not sad. They told me that Italy is a beautiful place.”

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acdha
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“I am not strong. Everyone says I am, they call me a hero because I keep going, but I want the right not to be strong. I am a woman whose children were killed, nearly all of them, when all I ever wanted was to protect them. Not just their bodies – I wanted to protect their feelings too. If God allowed this tragedy, there must be a reason. There has to be. But I don’t know what it is.”
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sarcozona
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