Tuesday, March 24, 2026

ICE in airports is really stupid political move for Trump

Sending ICE officers to the airport because of long lines at security checkpoints is a hilariously bad idea. When Trump announced the ICE deployment via Truth Social over the weekend, people immediately wondered what exactly ICE could do to address the problem. It did not seem like he was saying that ICE personnel would help screen passengers (ICE are not trained on any of the equipment that TSA uses to screen passengers). So what would they be doing other than standing around and making crowded airports even more crowded?

Apparently yes, that is exactly what they are doing.

But the thing that makes Trump's decision to assign ICE to airports so ridiculous is that is is an astoundingly bad political move for Trump, for at least these reasons:

  1. ICE is really unpopular. If you are the President and want to bolster support for your go-to thuggish organization, having them go to where people are really frustrated and then stand there and do nothing to relieve the frustration is just going to make people hate them more.
  2. It links ICE to TSA funding. The whole reason that TSA funding has not passed is because the Democrats will only pass funding for the Department of Homeland Security (which includes the TSA) if the funding bill includes legal restrictions on ICE. Even though ICE is really unpopular, there is some risk to that strategy because the Administration can argue that because ICE funding had already passed last year, Democrats' condition for funding the TSA had nothing to do with that organization. By sending ICE to "assist" the TSA, Trump is making an ICE-TSA connection that makes the funding conditions seem to make more sense.
  3. It undermines the Administration's argument that ICE officers must wear masks. Since Trump regained the presidency, ICE agents started wearing masks when they made their immigration arrests. Masked law enforcement officers is associated with human rights violations across the world. But the Trump Administration has argued it is necessary to make sure that ICE agents don't get doxxed. (Meaning publicly identified. That is not really what "doxxing" means, but that is what the Administration now claims doxxing is). The masking of ICE agents is a big deal. A ban on their masks is one of the conditions that Democrats have attached to their Homeland Security funding bills. And yet, ICE agents are not wearing masks in the airport. So now it is pretty clear that the Administration doesn't care if ICE officers can be publicly identified. They just don't want them to be publicly identified when they are abusing the civil rights of immigrants and minorities on the streets, which makes Democrats' condition for DHS funding seem a whole lot more reasonable.
  4. It will help groups identify ICE officers who have committed illegal acts and human rights violations. A bunch of groups I follow have urged people to photograph unmasked ICE agents in airports and to send the photos to groups who are trying to identify the perpetrators of abusive conduct by masked agents. In other words, this deployment is helping Trump's opponents to build a database of ICE agents which will help those groups identify individuals who commit human rights abuses at other places, the very conduct the Trump Administration is trying to hide by having them wear masks in the first place.
  5. Sending ICE to chaotic airports reinforces the idea that ICE is an agent of chaos not law and order.
  6. It wastes ICE's time and money. Every ICE officer standing around doing nothing in an airport hallway is one less officer who can raid someone's home or snatch them from a car. This deployment also costs money which will help spend down the obscene budget that Congress passed for ICE last year. Very few undocumented people ever fly. So this might slow down the Steve Miller ethnic cleansing program, at least by a little bit.

Those are the things that immediately come to mind for me. I am sure there are more.



Monday, March 16, 2026

My amateur art critic view of the 2 most recent Iranian flags

I'm making no comment at all on which regime I like better, rule under the Shah or the current Shia Theocracy (short answer: they both suck), but on purely aesthetic grounds, I think the current official flag of Iran looks better than the one with the lion.




The lion and sun, evoking ancient Persia, in the top flag is not bad. But I really think it is exceeded by the cleverness of the bottom flag. I like how they made a hyper-stylized version of "Allah" look like a tulip in the center of the current flag. I also like how the border between the two colors looks like some kind of complex embroidery, but is really the Takbir written in Kufic script over and over. I'm also a firm believer that flags tend to be worse when they go beyond three colors. They could have made the Allah/Tulip gold, like the lion and sun were in the prior flag. But using one of the basic tricolors from the flag is just a better choice. (I'm not sure why they made the center Allah red and not green though).

Again, the post-revolutionary regime in Iran is awful. But I think their design choices were more clever.


Sunday, March 15, 2026

Can all of the states implement the SAVE Act?

At least two states,. Oregon and Washington, conduct their elections entirely by mail. That is, in those two states there are not polling sites like you have in other states where people can vote in person. That has been true for more than a decade, and so I wonder if the SAVE Act passes and vote by mail is largely outlawed, how will Washington and Oregon handle elections?

I don't think the SAVE Act goes into effect in some future election, giving states time to build the apparatus to comply. The reason that Trump is pushing for its passage so hard is to save Republicans in the midterms in November. But do the all-mail voting states even have voting machines? If the Act passes this month, would there even be a practical way for them to comply?

Yeah I know that OR and WA are both blue states, but there are Dan Newhouse (R-WA)Michael Baumgartner (R-WA), and Cliff Benz (R-OR). The Republicans currently have a 5 vote majority in the House (218 Republicans to 213 Democrats) In an otherwise party-line vote and three votes switch, the law will fail.


Monday, March 09, 2026

I guess there are down-sides to having a stupid authoritarian president attack a country without a clear plan for anything

The thing that gets me about the quickly accelerating economic disaster we are heading into right now, is it was totally predictable and foreseeable. I foresaw it 20 years ago when W was talking about attacking Iran. And who am I? Just some young (in those days) blogger. I'm hardly and expert on international oil shipping.

If Trump hadn't fired everyone with expertise and competence, I'm sure someone would have mentioned this totally predictable and indeed often predicted consequences of attacking Iran. Or he could have just paid attention. Iran has been openly talking about doing exactly what it is doing now for many years.


Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Let's face it, everyone hates the State of the Union now.

One score and three years ago, I started this humble blog with, well, no real purpose. I fished around for a purpose for a while, some would say I am still fishing, but finally, in late January 2004, I found it: I always post about how much I hate the State of the Union Address.

Okay, that is not all I do here. I'm not sure what else exactly I do do here, but if it were just that, I would just post one thing a year. But posting about the SOTU, and how much I hate it, is one of the things that I do here, and I do it every friggin year.

But it feels a little more boring now. I once was a lonely voice crying out in the wilderness about how shitty the SOTU address is. Nowadays, it's pretty much accepted that it is awful. Members of Congress are skipping the event and doing counter-programming outside. Everyone is stealing my bit!

Plus, can we all agree that the state of the union (not the speech but the actual state of the union of the United States) is terrible at the moment? Trump is too addled to get what this thing is supposed to be for--a report from the President to Congress about how things are going. That's how bad our state is! We have someone who may be the stupidest president in the history of this great nation, with a narcissistic personality disorder who is waltzing through various stages of dementia while his political party does nothing to stop it. That's really really bad! Our problems go way beyond the fact that the modern SOTU address has always been a bullshit celebration of nothingness. It seems almost silly to get into my familiar whine this year, even on this crowded bandwagon where everyone is probably a lot more receptive to my message.

And yet, here I am, whining my whine like I have for (!!!) twenty-two years.

The Whine Cellar: 20042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020 2021202220232024, 2025.


Saturday, February 07, 2026

Trump instinctively wants to be a dictator, but his instincts also make it harder for him to pull it off

First rule of seizing dictatorial power: keep members of the military happy. I would suggest that forcing them to watch a terrible and boring film is not a good way to do that.


Tuesday, February 03, 2026

If you want real reform of ICE and CBP, end their officers' immunity

In our disfunctional government, shutdowns have become so common they are barely news. But believe it or not, we are in a partial federal government shutdown right now. The main issue preventing a budget resolution to be passed seems to be what, if any, new restrictions to be put on ICE and/or CBP. The restrictions Democrats are proposing, requiring that immigration agents get warrants and stop racial profiling, "real accountability" (whatever that means), and requiring them to wear body cameras.

The problem is that some of those things are already required by law. Judicial warrants are required by the Constitution! This administration has no problem ignoring legal requirements. And the administration is adopting body cameras this week, before reaching any funding deal.  But nothing would really stop them if officers turn the cameras off or stop wearing them. Plus they control the camera footage. Just having cameras does no good if this fascist agency has total control of the tape.

But there is one simple thing that the Democrats could insist upon that would make a real difference and would be enforceable: End qualified immunity for ICE and CBP officers. If ICE and Border Patrol were liable for their officer's misconduct, that could potentially be an enforceable check against abuse. If victims of ICE/CBP officer violence could sue for damages, that could mean real accountability, and compensation for people who they are harming. I bet if that happened we would immediately see a dramatic drop in the number of car windows smashed, ransacked homes, and even shootings. It would also create an incentive for ICE and CBP officers to have body cameras turned on--that is their alibi against false accusations. And without immunity that would give an avenue to get footage that is less exonerating through discovery.

But most importantly, lifting immunity for those officers would move enforcement of the new restrictions out of the executive branch that Trump controls. The courts would decide liability. We would not have to hope that the DHS honors any deal about how to restrict officers later on. I realize the courts  are flawed. There are a lot of terrible Trump-appointed judges on the bench who might dismiss cases about the most egregious abuses, and the number of Trump judges is growing. But there are still a lot of non-Trump judges, and the DHS can't bet on getting a Trump judge every time so it still could serve as a check.

Finally, having CBP and ICE pay for their abuses is  also a back-door way to have at least some of that enormous budget increase pay for something other than abusing people. When the huge increase in ICE funding passed last year, there was a lot of concern that would lead to even more egregious abuses. But if ICE officers did not have immunity, that enormous budget could at least partially be turned into a compensation fund.

Am I too optimistic about the power of lawsuits to bring justice? Maybe. But I don't think there is any question that lifting officer immunity would make a much bigger difference than any of the things that Chuck Schumer is  insisting upon now that the administration could easily ignore later.