From: AlleyCat <katt@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.politics.trump,alt.politics.liberalism,alt.politics.democrats,alt.politics.usa.republican
Subject: Hey Siri Kook... You Fixed Your Mistake Yet?
Date: Sat, 5 Apr 2025 17:01:51 -0500
Organization: AlleyCat Computing, Inc.
From: Siri Cruz <chine.bleu@yahoo.com>
No habeas corpus outside USA. As idjt was saying, hey, we make a
mistake, no problem, we bring him back for his day in court.
I wonder if El Salvador will accept a ransom. Or whether they
want to release any witnesses to what they are doing in the
Donaldov Gulag. As in DPRK and Otto Warmbier.
<https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/01/politics/maryland-father-mistakenly-deported-el-salvador-prison/index.html>
The Trump administration conceded in a court filing Monday that
it mistakenly deported a Maryland father to El Salvador "because
of an administrative error" and argued it could not return him
because he's now in Salvadoran custody.
The filing stems from a lawsuit over the removal of Kilmar
Armando Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national who in 2019 was
granted protected status by an immigration judge, prohibiting the
federal government from sending him to El Salvador.
The filing, first reported by The Atlantic, appears to mark the
first time the administration has admitted an error related to
its recent deportation flights to El Salvador, which are now at
the center of a fraught legal battle.
"On March 15, although ICE was aware of his protection from
removal to El Salvador, Abrego Garcia was removed to El Salvador
because of an administrative error," the Trump administration
filing states.
=====
Turns out, it's NOT the "mistake" you faggots thought.
The Atlantic failed to mention a key piece of "evidence".
The Trump administration acknowledged in a court filing Monday, it had grabbed a Maryland father with protected legal status and
mistakenly deported him to El Salvador, but said the US courts lack jurisdiction to order his return from the mega-prison where
he's now locked up.
Now, on the face of that, that's really bad, right? I mean, that's a bad story. If they just took a random guy who had protected
status from El Salvador. And then he was taken and thrown into a prison in El Salvador. And he's just like an innocent guy.
That's a really bad story, obviously, that would be a very big screw up and if the administration is saying they can't do
anything to fix it, that's even bigger screw up.
However, here is the thing, OK, this is the part where the Atlantic screws it up. This is what makes this story, at least
partially fake news. An immigration judge found that Garcia was an MS-13 member, a flight risk and a threat to the community six
years ago. An immigration judge found that. And that is not included in the story.
===============================================================================
"Trump Derangement Syndrome" Is a Real Mental Condition
All you need to know about "Trump Derangement Syndrome," or TDS.
"Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS) is a mental condition in which a person has been driven effectively insane due to their dislike
of Donald Trump, to the point at which they will abandon all logic and reason."
Justin Raimondo, the editorial director of Antiwar.com, wrote a piece in the Los Angeles Times in 2016 that broke TDS down into
three distinct phases or stages:
"In the first stage of the disease, victims lose all sense of proportion. The president-elect's every tweet provokes a firestorm,
as if 140 characters were all it took to change the world."
"The mid-level stages of TDS have a profound effect on the victim's vocabulary: Sufferers speak a distinctive language consisting
solely of hyperbole."
"As TDS progresses, the afflicted lose the ability to distinguish fantasy from reality."
The Point here is simple: TDS is, in the eyes of its adherents, the knee-jerk opposition from liberals to anything and everything
Trump does. If Trump announced he was donating every dollar he's ever made, TDS sufferers would suggest he was up to something
nefarious, according to the logic of TDS. There's nothing - not. one. thing. - that Trump could do or say that would be received
positively by TDSers.
The history of Trump Derangement Syndrome actually goes back to the early 2000s - a time when the idea of Trump as president was
a punch line for late-night comics and nothing more.
Wikipedia traces its roots to "Bush Derangement Syndrome" - a term first coined by the late conservative columnist Charles
Krauthammer back in 2003. The condition, as Krauthammer defined it, was "the acute onset of paranoia in otherwise normal people
in reaction to the policies, the presidency - nay - the very existence of George W. Bush."