❝ These men—human beings with names, histories, dreams—were marched through a gauntlet of armed guards, beaten, stripped naked, shaved, and thrown into overcrowded cells. A photojournalist on the scene described watching men age a decade in two hours. He watched as one young man sobbed, “I’m not a gang member. I’m gay. I’m a barber.” This man was slapped for his tears, beaten for his vulnerability.

No phone calls. No visitors. No books. No talking. Just exile to a place “so cold and far from home they may as well have been sent into space, nameless and forgotten.”

And all of this—every slap, every sob, every stolen dignity—stamped with American approval. Coordinated with American officials. Executed with American efficiency. ❞

https://www.techdirt.com/2025/03/28/what-is-it-exactly-that-being-an-american-means-to-you/

What Is It, Exactly, That Being An American Means to You?

Is it a flag on your porch? A sense of pride during the national anthem? A particular vision of freedom or prosperity? Perhaps it’s a story you tell yourself about who we are and what we stan…

Techdirt
@nazgul after WWII, the cop-out was "wir haben es night gewußt". Maybe it held up back then, there was no TV, no Internet. I wonder what Americans will say when this is all over and the horrors of this fascist regime are documented by historians (and by, hopefully, the equivalent of the Nürburg tribunals). "We did not know" it cannot be.

@cdegroot @nazgul

nicht rather than night, but yes, all of it.
Ignorance (of the law) is no defense is true even when "the law" changes.

@deirdrebeth heh. Didn't notice the spell checker playing interference. Verzeihung.

@cdegroot

I only did because I tried the auto translate and failed 😄