Jul 14, 2026

ICE Iced Baby

First, there are always huge, glaring problems with organizations like The Gestapo, The Stasi, the Soviet Secret Police, and various other iterations of Death Squads.
Better training is not on the fucking list.


ICE to temporarily halt conducting vehicle stops, sources say

ICE officers will receive new training on vehicle stops, sources said.


U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has been ordered to temporarily stop conducting vehicle stops in the wake of two deadly shootings in Texas and Maine, sources told ABC News.

Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin gave the directive, a law enforcement source told ABC News, after he spoke with Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, who said she urged Mullin to "cease all non-urgent vehicle stops."

In most cases, ICE officers will stop a target on the street once they leave their house or office, but ICE will still use vehicle stops in cases involving the most dangerous targets, according to a source.

Multiple sources said the pause is temporary and that ICE officers will receive new training on vehicle stops.

Guerrero, a Colombian national, was not the target of the operation and ICE agents had been given a final order for another man they were targeting to be removed from the U.S., King told ABC News.

An ICE spokesperson said that the agency was “conducting targeted surveillance on the last known address of an illegal alien with a final order of removal," and when an “illegal alien departed the residence in a vehicle,” ICE agents “attempted to conduct a vehicle stop.”

Man fatally shot by federal officer in Houston was not ICE target, DHS says
“The vehicle attempted to flee the scene and fearing for public safety an officer discharged his weapon,” ICE said.

The Maine Attorney General's Office said "the suspect attempted to flee in the vehicle in the direction of the officer and was fatally shot."

Witness Daniel Boucher told ABC News that he watched agents pull the shooting victim from his car and put him on the ground.

"I heard the young man say, 'I tried to stop.' I clearly heard him say that," said Boucher, adding that he overheard one of the ICE agents allegedly say the driver tried to run him over.

It's About Time

Joe Neguse is a rising star.

I'd love to get real, and stop fuckin' around with time changes, but he ain't wrong.

"Republicans are majoring in the minors - fiddling with the clocks while the country burns."


Is It A Scam Yep


Erika Jordan

Surface Acting
A drowning person, when asked, "How ya doin'?", is required by social norms to perform floating.

Alexithymia:
Often called "emotional blindness," alexithymia is a personality trait characterized by significant difficulty identifying, understanding, and describing emotions. It is not a mental illness, but rather a deficit in emotional processing that makes it challenging to connect physical sensations - like a racing heart - with specific feelings.


Jul 13, 2026

Ain't Seen Nuthin' Yet


You crybaby MAGA dopes think we're being mean and nasty now when it's Lindsey - and prob'ly Mitch here pretty soon too?

Wait'll you see what we come up with when that stupid puffy Cheetoh-face motherfucker finally kicks off.

That shit's gonna singe your eyebrows.

Update On Our Concentration Camps

These assholes actually tried to turn the American Auschwitz into a tourist attraction.

You are nine kinds of fucked up, America.


Alligator Alcatraz is no more. Tents, cars, signs disappear from airport site 

The bright blue sign reading ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ outside the silver chain-link gate at Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport has been removed. The airstrip, formerly used to hold immigrants in industrial tents, is now cleared with only a few structures and cars remaining. And after Gov. Ron DeSantis invested over a billion dollars to transform the Everglades runway into an immigration detention center, it now looks as if that never occurred.

Aerial photos shared with the Miami Herald show that the airstrip, seized from Miami-Dade by the DeSantis administration through an emergency order, is mostly vacated. The now-closed first-of-its-kind state-run immigration detention center had been established to support the Trump administration’s mass deportation campaign.

As of Sunday, people who have monitored the facility’s entrance since last summer told the Herald that the black-and-gold Florida Highway Patrol vehicles, which had been parked at the one-way entrance with their blue sirens flashing, had left. Only one unidentified vehicle remained, sometimes assisting with opening and closing the gate as cars entered; someone from the vehicle had keys to unlock the fence.

Overhead photos of the airstrip, shared with the Herald, also show that all the tents had been removed, leaving the airstrip bare.

“Not much left but a couple of trucks and a few contractors standing around,” pilot Ra Schooley, who took the aerial photos Sunday morning, remarked to the Herald.

The Florida Department of Emergency Management did not respond to the Herald’s request for comment.

Miami-Dade mayor’s office told the Herald on Monday that the state had not returned control of the property to the county.

n June, DeSantis announced that the detention center, a brainchild of his attorney general, James Uthmeier, was shutting down and had served its purpose. DeSantis credited the site with detaining almost 21,000 immigrants and touted it as a model for how states could partner with the federal government on immigration enforcement.

DeSantis said that the airstrip facilitated the deportation of immigrants, whom he described as ‘dangerous people.’ During the announcement of the facility’s closure, with Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, standing under a white tent on the airport’s runway, DeSantis said that the detention center was never meant to be permanent.

“I said from the beginning that this was an emergency solution that would be temporary,” he told reporters in the June press conference.

Environmental conservationists, immigration lawyers and advocates, who welcomed the closure of the detention center — where immigrants reported poor living conditions and faced pepper spray and beatings — also raised concerns that the facility may have harmed the nearby Everglades wetlands ecosystem. 

The environmental groups were the first to file a lawsuit against the state and federal governments when the detention facility was hastily erected within days last summer. The groups have maintained that in the rush to support Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigration by building the facility, the government failed to comply with federal environmental regulations that require an impact assessment before such projects are undertaken.

The case involved a Florida federal judge temporarily shutting the site in August, but the order could not take full effect; an appeals court paused it and later found that the judge might have overstepped their authority by ordering the site to close. The case is still working its way through the courts.

The groups also accused the DeSantis administration of pollution, citing that the detention center’s diesel-powered generators and bright lights had exceeded federal standards and required a special permit that they say the state never obtained.

As the facility’s closure became imminent, Miami-Dade’s mayor, Danielle Levine Cava, announced in June that the federal parks system would assume control of the airstrip and the 17,000 acres surrounding the Big Cypress Preserve. Previously, Levine had rejected purchase proposals from DeSantis, who later took ownership of the land through state powers.

Environmental groups followed the mayor’s recommendation by calling for the airstrip to become an environmental preserve. A letter from the Friends of the Everglades, the environmental group whose founder fought in the 1960s for the airport to be shuttered, laid out a five-point plan that called for the airport runway to be removed completely and for the land to be returned to “a purpose that reflects their environmental significance.”

Other environmentalists, like Betty Osceola, have called for the land to be returned to the Miccosukee Tribe, whose lands surround the airport.

“This has been doing training missions and training flights, and will continue to do that,” DeSantis said when asked about the future of the airstrip in June.

A notice from the Federal Aviation Administration currently says the airstrip is closed to planes until September.

DeSantis, who has pushed for the Everglades restoration project, still found that the more than a billion dollars spent operating the detention center for less than a year was worth it.

Is Mitch Dead?

This is wholly speculative. But how doubtful is it really?

And who thinks Republicans wouldn't pull this kind of shit?


Marco


A Win




Judge blasts Trump’s IRS lawsuit as filed for ‘improper purpose,’ recommends attorney discipline

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump’s lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service over his leaked tax returns was filed for an “improper purpose,” a judge said Monday in a scathing decision that recommended attorney sanctions and disciplinary action.

The ruling from U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams amounts to a stinging rebuke of the Republican president’s lawsuit, characterizing it as an exercise in self-dealing in which he sued an entity that is effectively under his control.

The suit concluded in May with a settlement agreement that created a since-abandoned $1.776 billion fund meant to compensate allies of the president, as well as immunity from tax audits.

“The nature of the suit itself and the conduct of the Parties and counsel from its filing make plain that this was an attempt to use the Court to provide some legitimacy to an agreement to confer immunity to people and entities affiliated with the President and to earmark billions of dollars from American taxpayers to redress grievances not defined in the law,” the judge wrote.

Overheard


In case you needed one positive thing to think about today:
Lindsey Graham wanted war with Iran more than he wanted practically anything else - and he died knowing it was all fucked up.