American Gestapo/American Psycho
February 1, 2026
The U.S. has a government devoid of social virtue and bent primarily on demonstrating its power over persons, says Andrew Napolitano.

ICE agents in 2023. (usicegov/Wikimedia Commons)
By Andrew P. Napolitano
A half-dozen masked and unidentifiable Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents killed a 37-year-old federal employee, a nurse, on Jan. 24 by spraying pepper spray into his eyes, pushing him to the ground, stealing his lawfully owned and carried handgun, and then shooting him nine times in the back.
The thugs from ICE whom the federal government has sent to Minneapolis have produced murder and mayhem on a scale far more violent, disruptive and disturbing to human life than have the immigrants residing there without papers.
Under the U.S. Constitution, immigration — who can legally come to and remain in the United States — was left to the states to regulate; and naturalization — who can become an American citizen — was left to the feds.
Notwithstanding the plain text of the Constitution, Congress — motivated by racial animus against those who looked and sounded differently from the White, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant elites who controlled the government — enacted the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. When this was challenged, the Supreme Court upheld congressional authority in a truly bizarre opinion written by Justice George Sutherland, himself an immigrant.
The court held — for the first time — that Congress could exercise regulatory powers from a source other than the Constitution. It reasoned that when British troops left the colonies after their surrender in 1781, the power to regulate immigration stayed behind and metaphysically transferred itself to the new federal government here. A rationale from nowhere.
Since then, federal immigration regulations have waxed and waned, usually depending upon contemporary economic trends and prevailing racial attitudes. A century after the ruling on the Chinese Exclusion Act, at President Ronald Reagan’s prompting, Congress enacted the Simpson-Mazzoli Act, which granted amnesty and permanent legal residence to all immigrants then in the U.S. The sky did not fall.
The White House has defended the ICE killings of two innocent Americans in the maelstrom of Minneapolis by using phrases like terrorist, agitator, assassin and self-defense. In the process of politically smearing two dead victims, it has tried to divert attention away from the ICE Gestapo-like tactics in the streets. And, in an act of obstructing justice, ICE has kept all the evidence of these murders from state investigators.
Are the masked men in the streets immune from prosecution for murder as the White House claims?
Federal and state laws mandate — and all police, even DHS agents, know this — that if the driver of a vehicle moving less than 5 miles per hour is trying to turn away from you, you don’t kill the driver; you let her turn or get out of the way. If somehow you feel threatened by a man on all fours on the ground whose lawfully carried handgun you have already seized, and whom you have temporarily blinded with pepper spray because he photographed you, you restrain him, you don’t shoot him in the back.
The reason police foreknowledge of right and wrong (who doesn’t know it is wrong to shoot an unarmed person in the back?) and of lawful and criminal use of force is relevant is another bizarre Supreme Court ruling which declared that prosecutions of government agents for excessive use of force will rise or fall on whether other similarly situated government defendants manifested this foreknowledge. Another legal principle from out of nowhere.
Can the state of Minnesota prosecute the ICE killers? Yes, under federal and state laws. Just ask Lon Horiuchi, the F.B.I. sharpshooter at Ruby Ridge whom the state of Idaho prosecuted for excessive force when he killed the wife of the person the feds were trying to arrest by shooting her in the back. And there is no statute of limitations for murder.
Shameless Lying

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem during a tour of the Terrorist Confinement Center CECOT in Tecoluca, El Salvador, on March 26, 2025. (DHS/Flickr/Tia Dufour)
More dangerous than American Gestapo is American Psycho — an attitude of government devoid of moral principles. One that — as authoritarians throughout history have done — targets a helpless, hopeless, politically weak minority and justifies murdering those who protest the violence employed in the targeting.
We have a government devoid of social virtue and bent primarily on demonstrating its power over persons. It is unbridled by the good, by the natural law, by the Constitution and by common decency. It has no values. It believes life is meaningless. In its fear of ordinary folks photographing its use of force in the streets, it verbally defends killing the photographer.
This psychotic government claimed the first Minneapolis person its agents murdered was a terrorist. She wasn’t. Then it claimed her spouse was a terrorist. She wasn’t.
Then it claimed that the nurse videoing its agents was there to kill them because he lawfully carried a handgun and ammunition. He wasn’t. Then it claimed he “brandished” his gun. He never touched his gun; the ICE agents took it from him before they executed him. Now it claims this nurse it shot in the back while he was on all fours on the frozen earth and blinded by pepper spray was a threat to its agents. That’s hogwash.
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem told the media that her agents felt threatened and so they disarmed the nurse. The Supreme Court has ruled that the Second Amendment which protects the right to keep and bear arms, is as potent as the First Amendment. There was no legal basis to spray or detain the nurse, and thus these agents could no more lawfully disarm him than they could silence his speech about them.
This shameless lying is contradicted by what we all can see.
The same psychotic mentality that argued last year it can execute people on the high seas without trial has brought that might-makes-right nihilism into our streets. If Congress doesn’t stop this sickness in the executive branch by defunding it before it is too late, the voters will deem Congress complicit.
Of course, the psychopaths have the upper hand. Watch out, people of Iran. When the psychopaths are failing at home, they will bring us to war abroad.
https://consortiumnews.com/2026/02/01/a ... an-psycho/
(My question is whether this judge who is a position to know how things really work 'believes' in the Constitution or common decency. After all, he was Bill O'Rielly's go-to legal expert when Bill was just a tabloid creep.)
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What federal troops inflict on the streets of US cities is a reminder of what the American Empire has wrought around the globe. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images / Tribune)
The Empire comes home
Originally published: Tribune Magazine on January 30, 2026 by Stelios Foteinopoulos (more by Tribune Magazine) | (Posted Jan 31, 2026)
The horrific events in Minneapolis–the killing of civilians amid militarised operations, armed raids in residential neighbourhoods, and the conversion of an American city into a spectacle of state violence–are not an anomaly but a stark manifestation of a pattern long identified by political scientists and historians. This pattern reveals a fundamental truth: the violence intrinsic to empire knows no topography. Minnesota shows how it seeps back into the foundations of the imperial state itself, transforming domestic policing, social control, and the very conception of citizenship.
For centuries, we have been taught a geography of power: the West acts, the rest suffers. We are told that imperialism is an external project, a theatre of conquest confined to distant shores where armies clash to seize resources. The colonial subject, the foreign ‘other’, is understood as the sole bearer of its brutal legacy. This framing allows the imperial core to imagine itself as separate, insulated, and morally distinct; its domestic tranquillity is seen as unconnected to its foreign brutality. It is a narrative of clean hands. While this is comforting, it is also dangerous.
Imperial Boomerang
The concept of the imperial boomerang posits that the technologies of control, the ideologies of racial hierarchy, and the architectures of violence normalised and perfected at the edges of empire eventually return to the metropolitan centre. Practices first justified in those ‘exceptional’ spaces–the colonies, the border zones, the black sites, the distant wars–cannot be contained. They build their own pathway back through bureaucracy, through institutional memory, through a mindset that starts seeing certain people as ‘deplorables’ in times of systemic crisis. Over time, these tools get a software update and are redeployed in the heart of the once ‘liberal centre’. The target gets relabelled: from the ‘savage’ abroad to the ‘enemy within’.
This dynamic was articulated with prophetic clarity by Aimé Césaire in his seminal 1950 work, Discourse on Colonialism. He dismantled the European conceit that the West had both grown itself through its colonies and ‘civilised’ itself in the process. On the contrary, Césaire argued, while colonialism materially enriched the imperial powers, it simultaneously brutalised them morally, politically, and socially. It required and cultivated a mindset of absolute racial superiority, administrative arbitrariness, and dehumanisation of the ‘other’ to function. For Césaire, European fascism–specifically Nazism–was not a historical aberration but a ‘boomerang effect’. It was the point at which the colonial model of violence, ‘racialised, massified, bureaucratic, and impersonal’, was applied on European soil to European (including white) bodies. This is what led political theorist Hannah Arendt to coin the term ‘imperial boomerang’.
‘They tolerated that Nazism before it was inflicted on them,’ Césaire wrote; ‘they absolved it, shut their eyes to it, legitimised it, because, until then, it had been applied only to non-European peoples.’ The horror of the Holocaust, in this reading, was the shock of Europe confronting a mirrored, intensified version of its own colonial logic.
The historical evidence for this reflux of imperial techniques is extensive. Consider the British Empire. The concentration camp was not invented by the Nazis but was systematically used by the British during the Second Boer War (1899—1902) to detain Afrikaner civilians and Black Africans. Methods of population control, surveillance, and collective punishment honed in Ireland, India, and Kenya–such as curfews, identity passes, and ‘strategic hamlets’–informed later policing and counter-terror strategies in the UK itself, particularly in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, and in the monitoring of immigrant communities post-9/11.
For the United States, this process is deeply embedded in its national narrative. The frontier and the plantation were the nation’s first internal colonies, where ideologies of racial extermination and subjugation were forged. The logic of counter-insurgency practised against Native American populations–attacking civilian encampments, forced removals–prefigured twentieth-century warfare. It also influenced the professionalisation of a more violent, expeditionary-minded U.S. military and fed into the brutal repression of labour movements, such as the 1914 Ludlow Massacre, where the Colorado National Guard attacked striking miners and their families with tactics reminiscent of colonial warfare.
Old Methods, New Enemies
The War on Terror of the twenty-first century has accelerated and digitised this boomerang effect. The post-9/11 paradigm created a global, permanent, and legally exceptional battlefield. Practices authorised in Guantánamo Bay, Abu Ghraib, and CIA black sites–indefinite detention without trial, enhanced interrogation (torture), mass surveillance, and signature strikes based on metadata–did not stay abroad. They fundamentally altered the domestic landscape.
The 1033 programme funnelled billions of dollars’ worth of surplus military equipment–from armoured vehicles (MRAPs) and helicopters to night-vision goggles and assault rifles–to local police departments. The police response in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014, resembling an occupying army confronting an insurgent population, was a direct visual and tactical manifestation of this flow. And now ICE, an agency whose $30 billion annual budget matches the military budgets of Italy, Israel, and Brazil.
The ‘enemy within’: the ideological construct of a boundless, borderless war against terrorism legitimised the targeting of domestic groups, particularly Muslim, Arab, and South Asian communities, with entrapment strategies, no-fly lists, door-knocking, abductions of parents and five-year-olds, and more.
What is happening in Minneapolis is the institutionalised fruit of a carceral state built on a foundation of racialised control, enabled by the U.S. government. The empire has come home.
https://mronline.org/2026/01/31/the-empire-comes-home/
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Red Lake Nation blocks ICE entry, asserting sovereignty as agents move north
January 31, 2026 Gary Wilson

On Jan. 13, the Tribal Council of Red Lake Nation voted unanimously to restrict ICE and other federal immigration agents from entering Red Lake lands without a court order signed by a judge with jurisdiction. The resolution became public Jan. 28, as tribal leaders warned that federal agents were already “moving north.”
Under the new protocol, ICE must obtain a valid court order, present it to the Red Lake Department of Public Safety director, submit to a Red Lake officer escort at all times, and leave immediately after the order is served.
The council did not soften its language. Members said they were “ashamed and disgusted at the obvious violations of constitutional rights that are routinely being directed at United States citizens by ICE officers.”
Chair Darrell Seki Sr. also notified Minnesota’s congressional delegation that tribal officials had been told federal officers would soon “turn their sights north,” after ICE agents apprehended a member of the Leech Lake Band near Walker in northern Minnesota.
Red Lake’s action carries particular force because it is Minnesota’s only “closed reservation” — its land was never allotted, remains held in common, and the tribe retains authority over who may enter. Red Lake is also exempt from Public Law 280, meaning state courts have no jurisdiction on tribal lands. Together, these conditions preserve Red Lake’s sovereign control over its territory.
The impact reaches far beyond the reservation. Tribal officials estimate roughly 8,000 Red Lake people live in Minneapolis, placing thousands of Indigenous community members inside ICE’s expanding enforcement zone.
From Bdóte to Minneapolis: detention returns to familiar ground
Red Lake’s move comes amid a wave of Indigenous detentions in Minneapolis.
In early January, four tribal members were detained under a bridge near the Little Earth housing complex in East Phillips. Three were transferred to an ICE facility at Fort Snelling — a site Dakota people remember as a concentration camp at Bdóte, where the U.S. military imprisoned about 1,700 Dakota in 1862 as part of a broader campaign of genocide and forced removal. Families were held there behind military lines, exposed to disease and hunger, before being driven from their homelands into exile.
For Dakota communities, Fort Snelling is not a historic landmark. It is a site of mass detention. Families were confined there while the U.S. government carried out mass executions of Dakota men, before survivors were expelled from their homelands into exile. That same ground is now being used again to cage Indigenous people.
President Frank Star Comes Out of the Oglala Sioux Tribe confirmed that three of the detainees were taken to Fort Snelling.
“The irony is not lost on us,” he said. “Lakota citizens who are reported to be held at Fort Snelling — a site forever tied to the Dakota 38+2 — underscores why treaty obligations and federal accountability matter.”
The Dakota 38+2 refers to the 38 Dakota men publicly hanged by the U.S. government in Mankato on Dec. 26, 1862 — the largest mass execution in U.S. history — and two additional Dakota leaders, Sakpedan and Wakan Ozanzan, who were executed at Fort Snelling in 1864.
When the tribe requested information about its detained people, federal officials said it would need to enter an “immigration agreement” with ICE. The tribe refused.
“We will not enter an agreement that would authorize, or make it easier for, ICE or Homeland Security to come onto our tribal homeland,” Star Comes Out said.
One detainee has since been released.
Another case involves Jose Roberto Ramirez, a 20-year-old man of Red Lake Anishinaabe descent who was detained after ICE agents reportedly punched him during his arrest. His mother brought his passport and birth certificate to a federal building in Minneapolis, but was turned away.
Legal advocates note that ICE has no jurisdiction over Indigenous people in immigration matters. Federal law imposed U.S. nationality on tribal people in 1924, but treaties recognize Native nations as self-governing. As Star Comes Out wrote in a memo to members, “Tribal people are not aliens.”
Yet on the ground, those legal facts are being overridden by armed enforcement.
In Minneapolis, ICE is operating as a roaming detention force — stopping Indigenous people in public space, demanding documents, and transferring people into federal custody.
This is urban removal: surveillance first, seizure second.
Communities organize as ICE expands north
Indigenous communities across Minnesota have begun building rapid-response networks to intervene when ICE appears. Rachel Dionne-Thunder, co-founder of the Indigenous Protector Movement, narrowly avoided arrest Jan. 9 after neighbors and organizers converged when agents surrounded her vehicle.
Red Lake officials say such organizing has become necessary because ICE tactics are widening geographically and intensifying operationally. The Tribal Council cited reports of agents moving north out of the Twin Cities, signaling a broader regional push.
Similar confrontations with federal immigration agents have occurred in other states. In November, Indigenous actress Elaine Miles, a member of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation in Oregon, said ICE agents in Washington state questioned the legitimacy of her tribal identification, calling it “fake” before allowing her to go.
From Minneapolis streets to reservation borders, the first peoples of the Americas are being pulled into an enforcement dragnet that treats them as deportable bodies.
https://www.struggle-la-lucha.org/2026/ ... ove-north/




