logo
'One year after he was shot, Donald Trump has built a private army'

'One year after he was shot, Donald Trump has built a private army'

Daily Mirror14-07-2025
A year ago today, a bloodied Donald Trump raised a fist to the world and vowed to "fight, fight, fight".
The world's liberals slapped their foreheads that a 20-year-old who got 8 shots off couldn't have got one bullet on the right side of his ear, while the right-wingers rallied to back a candidate who now appeared to have divine protection.
Mugs, hats, t-shirts, bogus claims that it was staged or a Leftist conspiracy all toughened up the "must we?" attitude of Republican voters who one minute saw a twice-impeached, adjudicated rapist, liar, business failure and convicted felon and the next, saw a saviour. The Messianic mutterings of QAnon and the Proud Boys became mainstream voter chow, and a landslide was inevitable.
Trump was always going to win against a rambling, declining Joe Biden - but after dodging a bullet he won bigly, and then set about dismantling the nation's rules, institutions, economy, and friendships. He has been allowed to by an American people who have yet to notice the bullet hit them, instead.
American politics are slightly more violent than Sicilian weddings, and it is an historical fact that every assassination, attempted or otherwise, serves only to sweep the target to power. Voters everywhere, but particularly in the US, take it hard when their right to choose is threatened. Even more so, when it's by someone who can't shoot straight.
Most readers will know what happened next - the blizzard of executive orders, the pardoning of rioters we could all have sworn were in search of a Reichstag fire of their very own. But aside from some limited riots in Los Angeles, many seem unaware that Trump has built a growing private army financed by taxpayer dollars and granted insane powers of arrest and detention.
American exceptionalism has long held that immigrants will ruin the country. Only the native tribes have any evidence to back that up, but the ones who shout it loudest are the whitest, biggest and most amnesiac part of the demographic, and consequently loudest. Their poster boy is Tom Homan, a former police officer promoted to Immigration and Customs Enforcement by Barack Obama but since boosted, via a stint as a Fox News commentator, to being ICE's intellectual and cultural leader.
He talks about himself in the third person. He advocates picking on parents of children born in the USA with birthright citizenship, because "most parents don't want to be separated" and you can deport the next generation too. His budget has gone from $8bn to £28bn, and one of his henchmen just instructed deportations with as little as 6 hours' notice to countries a person has no connection to, and which do not have to be safe.
ICE is now the best-funded agency of the US federal government, and its agents have powers that corrupt cops can only dream of. They can get a warrant without a judge. They can arrest someone for 'reasonable suspicion', which is the same as 'if they fancy it'. They can conceal their identities, making them immune from the sort of lawsuits and scrutiny police officers get. They have tear gas.
The scant limits to their powers are rarely imposed, because their victims are generally deported out of reach of a complaints process. They are, in short, armed paramilitaries with all the powers of hell, coupled with the fervor unique to a job that attracts racists and provides weapons and deniability. The only difference between ICE and the Klansmen slave-hunters who terrorised Harriet Tubman is that, in the 19th century, there was somewhere safe in America to go to.
ICE have, so far, arrested the elected financial controller of New York after he support a constituent in immigration court. They have arrested 57,000 'suspected' illegal immigrants, 71% of whom have been convicted of no crime and more than half not even suspected of a crime. They have deported American children, people with documents and the right to remain, on evidence as flimsy as insisting that papers are forged. Most are denied any meaningful legal representation, and they are predominantly Mexican and South American.
According to Homan, who is determined to lead "the biggest deportation operation this country has even seen" since, presumably, the arrival of smallpox, the extra money will pay for agents, lawyers and judges ( wait, you can buy those? - Ed ), holding pens, and militarised raids on Democrat cities that traditionally protect their migrant workforce. If this isn't all screaming 'SS' at you yet, then you did not pay attention in history class.
The one upside is that ICE arrests are, despite all the above, at an historic low. Sleepy Joe was better at this, and he took a nap every afternoon. But the embarrassing rates are why Homan and others are so vociferously vicious, and why their budget is now big enough to buy several countries a nuclear deterrent and the submarines to put it in. The longer that ICE fails, the more will be thrown at it, and the more its stormtroops will overreach.
Next year Trump faces a test at the ballot box in the shape of the mid-term elections, which could remove his slim majorities in Congress. His approval ratings are below that of Obama and Biden, and keep dipping even below that of his first term. His MAGA fans are riled at Sudden Disappearing Jeffrey Epstein Client List, at the reversal of support for Ukraine, and the continuing presence of Hispanic faces.
Trump's ear is all better, but his Messiah complex is not. ICE agents have raided schools, arrested leukaemia patients and 9-year-old girls. They are, in effect, a private army tasked with breaking the law, and you can bet your last taxpayer dollar that next year they'll patrol polling stations in case 'migrants' dare to vote. America is headed for a very uncivil war with itself - and now Trump has troops trained to "fight, fight, fight" for his idea of what's right.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Blow for Trump's ICE raids as court upholds ban on snatching people based on appearance or job
Blow for Trump's ICE raids as court upholds ban on snatching people based on appearance or job

The Independent

time2 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Blow for Trump's ICE raids as court upholds ban on snatching people based on appearance or job

The Trump administration suffered another blow to its mass deportation agenda on Friday after an appeals court upheld a lower court's ruling that prevents Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents from detaining a person based on their appearance, native language, or job. A three-judge panel on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in Los Angeles said the plaintiffs, a cohort of five individuals and three immigration advocacy organizations, were likely to succeed on their claim that ICE agents violated the Fourth Amendment by relying on four factors to form reasonable suspicion to support detention stops. Those four factors include apparent race or ethnicity, speaking Spanish or English with an accent, presence at a particular location such as a laborer pick-up site, and the type of work a person does. Three plaintiffs who are day laborers said in their original lawsuit against Trump administration officials that they were waiting to be picked up to go to a construction site job when ICE agents swooped in and intimidated them. The plaintiffs said the immigration law enforcement officers never identified themselves, stated they had arrest warrants, nor informed the plaintiffs of the bases for the arrests. The Ninth Circuit panel upheld a previous temporary injunction set by District Court Judge Maame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong in June. In keeping with Trump's mass deportation agenda, immigration law enforcement officers were deployed throughout Southern California to begin conducting sweeping raids. Many of those raids, according to the lawsuit, were conducted at 'certain types of businesses' such as car washes, because immigration law enforcement officials determined those businesses were more likely to hire people without legal documentation. Plaintiffs in the lawsuit referred to those as 'roving patrols' and said they were being detained without reasonable suspicion. The Fourth Amendment protects people from unreasonable search and seizures. The raids, which led to protests in downtown Los Angeles back in May, have been challenged by multiple individuals and immigration advocacy groups. One plaintiff, Jason Brian Gavidia, said ICE agents stopped him in June after he stepped onto the sidewalk outside of a tow yard in Montebello, California. Gavidia, who is an American citizen, identifies as Latino and said ICE agents pushed him up against a chain-link fence and interrogated him. Even after Gavidia gave ICE agents his Real ID, they seemingly did not believe him. In her earlier ruling, Frimpong said Gavidia and other plaintiffs were likely to succeed 'in proving that the federal government is indeed conducting roving patrols without reasonable suspicion and denying access to lawyers.' Frimpong ordered immigration law enforcement not to rely solely on the four factors 'except as permitted by law.' While the appeals court panel upheld much of Frimpong's ruling, they did strike the 'except as permitted by law,' saying that language was too vague.

Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel sends warning to Tua Tagovailoa after Donald Trump called out NFL quarterback
Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel sends warning to Tua Tagovailoa after Donald Trump called out NFL quarterback

Daily Mail​

time2 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel sends warning to Tua Tagovailoa after Donald Trump called out NFL quarterback

Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel joked that Tua Tagovailoa has been given an 'executive order' to avoid getting hurt after Donald Trump told the quarterback he 'has got to stay healthy'. The 27-year-old started only 11 games last season amid concerns over his health after several nasty concussions. There were fears that Tagovailoa might have to call time on his career but he is back and preparing to lead the Dolphins into the 2025 campaign. On Thursday, president Trump namechecked the quarterback at the White House. Trump butchered the pronunciation of Tagovailoa but said he 'has really been fantastic.' 'When he's not injured, he's great. He's got to stay healthy. But he's a great guy,' the president said. On Saturday, McDaniel addressed Trump's comments during Dolphins training camp, telling NFL Network: 'If I was concerned about how serious he was taking his part in staying healthy, I think he got an executive order last night to stay healthy, if I'm not mistaken.' He then praised his quarterback, adding: 'It's been cool to watch him really evolve into who he is on the national stage but more so, really in his own skin, be the true leader of the team. 'It's real and authentic and all he's done is - in a ton of noise - focus on the right stuff. So there's a lot of things that go into staying healthy but first and foremost you have to front-end prioritize and really acknowledge what you mean to the team. 'And, like in years past, he lives and embraces "control-ables" and is not afraid of any work. So guys respond to him.' The president, 79, hosted multiple professional athletes, including golfer Bryson DeChambeau and Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker, at the White House Thursday for an executive order signing that will reestablish the Presidential Fitness Test. A number of sports stars will form a newly-created council of to help with the reinstatement of the test, including Tagovailoa as well as Super Bowl winner Saquon Barkley. But Trump's attempt at praising the Dolphins passer was almost derailed when the president tripped over his last name, which is pronounced 'Tun-go-val-oa.' The Commander-in-Chief sounded out the last name of the signal caller, who is of Samoan descent, before butchering it anyway and pronouncing it 'Ta-go-valiah.' The Alabama product appears to be close to the president's extended family. Earlier this year, Tagovailoa and his former Dolphins teammate Braxton Berrios spent time with First Daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner. Ivanka, the eldest daughter of president Trump, shared photos of her family hanging out with the NFL stars, which included her son passing the pigskin around and playing chess with Tagovailoa.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store