Trump Mobilizing Combat Units on US Soil: 82nd Airborne to Say “Papers Please”

The rapid militarization of America’s immigration response this week represents the military deployment for domestic population control that experts and officials long claimed could never happen here.

Within 48 hours of Trump entering the White House, the Department of Defense has established a dedicated military Task Force under U.S. Northern Command (NORTHCOM), increasing active-duty ground forces by 60% with combat troops, helicopters, and military intelligence analysts. This represents a stark departure from traditional National Guard border support – for the first time, we’re seeing the 82nd Airborne’s “forcible entry” troops under direct federal military command, signaling wartime operations rather than law enforcement assistance.

The scale already is staggering: the Department of Defense has deployed combat troops to forcibly deport over 5,000 people with military aircraft just from the San Diego and El Paso sectors alone. The barrier between civilian law enforcement and military operations – a norm and cornerstone of democratic society – has been shattered. Their initial simplified operating plan (Level 3) is unmistakably focused on combat units, traditionally reserved for global crisis response and warfare, preparing to land on U.S. soil using explicit wartime rhetoric. The Acting Defense Secretary has already directed both U.S. Transportation Command and Northern Command to begin operations, moving far beyond traditional support roles into direct military action. The administration’s executive orders literally frame immigration as an “invasion,” deliberately invoking military response authorities. This isn’t happening gradually – deportation flights by the U.S. military into remote detention centers are underway and ramping up towards Level 4 (full scale), with thousands more troops preparing for deployment.

…officials have struggled to articulate many of the details that are normally a fundamental part of any military deployment, even as this one reportedly could ultimately swell to as many as 10,000 troops and as service members were already beginning to head to the border. …all 500 Marines were being pulled from the Federal Emergency Management Agency mission to support California’s wildfire response.

As the Acting Secretary ominously warned, “This is just the beginning,” a nod to something even more alarming. The new Defense Secretary overseeing this domestic military operation was previously flagged as an extremist threat to American citizens, openly opposed rules of engagement in combat zones, and worked to minimize the role of military members in the January 6th attack. His extremist rhetoric to “restore warrior culture” signals a planned purge of anyone who might resist unlawful orders against civilian populations.

This isn’t some minor policy adjustment or temporary measure, as Trump himself brags. This is the American dam abruptly breaking. The administration is constructing the complete legal framework for treating civilian movement as warfare. This is precisely the constitutional crisis that the founders tried to prevent by separating military and civilian power – and why Congress passed the Posse Comitatus Act banning federal troops from domestic law enforcement after seeing military power abused against civilian populations during Reconstruction.

By falsely declaring immigration an “invasion,” the administration is exploiting Article IV Section 4’s promise to “protect” states to override Posse Comitatus. The January 22nd executive order uses this constitutional provision to authorize immediate military action while stripping civilian protections like asylum. The deliberately bogus recasting creates legal cover for deploying combat units to raid businesses, homes, schools, and churches to expedite deportations at gunpoint – exactly what these laws were meant to prevent.

Combined with a Defense Secretary who opposed rules of engagement and celebrates “warrior culture,” this creates the complete disaster: legal framework, military infrastructure, and command structure for civilian populations suddenly becoming military targets, explicitly justified in rushed official documents. The administration is slamming these pieces into place faster than courts can respond, meaning a strategic erosion of the barriers between military and civilian law enforcement that were meant to protect democracy.

History shows us with chilling consistency that militarizing response to civilians while fraudulently describing them as militant “invaders” precedes mass human rights violations. From Guatemala’s 1982 disappearances (“Ronald Reagan’s ‘Special Unit’ Soldier Sentenced to 5,160 Years in Jail for Mass Murder“) to Indonesia’s 1965 killings to America First’s 1919 deployment of combat troops against Black farmers to America First’s 1916 gas chambers for Hispanics and burning them to death – each followed the same documented playbook: first comes false invasion rhetoric, then military deployment for “population control,” then mass detention infrastructure to abruptly disappear civilians.

In 1925, Sharpe Dunaway, an employee of the Arkansas Gazette, alleged that soldiers in Elaine had “committed one murder after another with all the calm deliberation in the world, either too heartless to realize the enormity of their crimes, or too drunk on moonshine to give a continental darn.” … anecdotal information suggests that U.S. troops also engaged in torture of African Americans to make them confess and give information.

Today, we’re seeing these exact initial stages: combat units, military transport, and leadership that illegally targets civilian populations as military threats.

Source: ArkTimes. President Wilson’s “America First” platform stood for systemic racist oppression, using federal troops to disrupt and destroy American non-white communities. After white supremacist mobs, led by local police, killed hundreds of Black farmers, President Wilson ordered Camp Pike soldiers to round-up Black survivors at gunpoint for mass incarceration in Elaine, Arkansas 1919.

The headlines now will describe rapid, systematic construction of militarized infrastructure for mass detention and deportation, being built piece by piece in plain sight. Recognizing this as a warning sign of something far worse isn’t alarmist enough by any measure; it’s a moral imperative based on historical precedent. What’s different today is how Palantir and their domestic surveillance offshoot Peregrine operate opaque unsafe targeting algorithms, as if Wall Street read “The Trial” by Kafka and thought it was a guide for unicorn startups.

Source: AFP. US military plane at the Guatemalan Air Force Base in Guatemala City, reminiscent of President Wilson’s infamous 1919 “America First” operations, which by 1921 meant napalm dropped on American cities, widespread shootings and unmarked mass graves.

The time to sound the alarm was before the election, before the executive orders, before the Senate confirmation. Some critical oversight mechanisms still do exist, but who knows if anything left will hold: Congressional oversight committees can demand answers about troop deployments and military operations on U.S. soil. Soldiers can refuse unlawful orders. State attorneys general retain authority to challenge federal overreach. Civil rights organizations can still file legal challenges against military detention. Journalists still have First Amendment protections to document and expose these operations.

History will ask what we did when we saw the clear signs. “America First” has for over 100 years meant widespread domestic terrorism, a political front for the KKK.

And yet here it is again on the federal stage as if everyone forgets everything.

What oversight we demanded, what challenges we filed, what stories we documented, what resistance we mounted. The answer can’t be that we looked away while the infrastructure for racist mass human rights tragedy was built in plain sight, again.

German Concentration Camp Director Tells Elon Musk to Put His Hand Down and Shut Up

Tesla Factory near Berlin in Grünheide, Germany

The message couldn’t be clearer from Dr. Jens-Christian Wagner, director of Buchenwald Memorial, Germany’s largest former concentration camp site.

Take a history book, retreat for three days, read it, and please be silent.

His directive comes in response to Elon Musk’s Nazi salute at a Donald Trump campaign event, a gesture that has sparked international outrage.

Wagner, the historian who oversees the site where Nazi forces murdered 56,000 people, told The Times that Musk represents “a dangerous combination of unstable and far-right extremist.”

As the director of one of Europe’s most significant Holocaust memorials, and expert in Nazi history, Wagner’s warning carries particular weight.

The timing is notable. Buchenwald Memorial, which operated as a concentration camp from 1937 until its liberation by U.S. troops in April 1945, now faces weekly visitor assaults on its dignity.

Wagner reports an escalating pattern of disruptions: Elon Musk-like Nazi salutes, “Sieg Heil” chants, and deliberate interference with guided tours.

[Notorious UK political extremist] Davies “went on tour to Germany to Buchenwald to give the Nazi salute in the execution chamber that was a flagrant and provocative breach of German law”. […] “To a terrorist hiding in plain sight, which is what Mr Davies is, bans mean nothing.”

That incident was 2016, not long after several others, if you see what I mean about Buchenwald staff being experts in identifying provocative gestures by Elon Musk.

Police are investigating a football fan who allegedly made the Hitler salute at the former Buchenwald concentration camp…. The incident follows a previous case in mid-July when several men were arrested after giving the Hitler salute at the former concentration camp.

A year before his Nazi salute, Musk stood accused of antisemitism as he staged an Auschwitz photo op with his toddler. The partner of the Holocaust survivor present with him saw right through it. She reported “He was utterly detached… about his press junket” and called him a sociopath using the death camp PR to hide intentions.

Most recently, staff discovered Elon Musk’s controversial “X” brand (formerly called Twitter) carved into a seminar room table. In context of Tesla’s campaign to cut down 500,000 trees around Berlin, vandals at the camp have destroyed 50 of the memorial’s 250 commemorative trees.

Wagner’s rebuke of Musk highlights a growing crisis: when apartheid-raised South African billionaires normalize Nazi gestures in America, it emboldens extremists to target the very spaces dedicated to ensuring we never forget the Holocaust’s horrors.

Update: Elon Musk made a surprise visit to stoke Nazism at a German extremist political rally where he told them to forget the past. Speaking from his personal experience, as the grandson of an extremist arrested in Canada for being a national security threat during WWII (grandfather who fled to amass a fortune of blood money extracted by a white supremacist South Africa), Musk regularly signals to his followers that they should attempt the worst mistakes in history again.

January 6 Rioters Re-Arrested for New Crimes After Trump Pardon

Recent reports indicate that some January 6th rioters who received presidential pardons have been re-arrested for new crimes. One case involves an individual with prior felony convictions who, despite being legally barred from possessing firearms due to his violent history, was arrested for unlawful firearm possession shortly after receiving his pardon.

Daniel Ball was accused of assaulting law enforcement and tossing an explosive device into the Capitol on January 6th. In total, he was indicted on TWELVE counts, including assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers with a deadly or dangerous weapon; using fire or an explosive to commit any felony; and knowingly engaging in any act of physical violence while carrying or using a deadly or dangerous weapon. Trump thought that was a total normal and peaceful way to behave, so of course he was pardoned.

Ball was rearrested less than one day later in a separate charge related to the unlawful possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. See, Ball was not new at criming. In fact, he had THREE previous felony convictions – domestic-violence battery by strangulation, resisting law enforcement with violence, and battery against a law-enforcement officer. So, he could not legally possess a firearm.

The pardons appear politically motivated and disregard public safety, given that recipients’ history of violent behavior and subsequent reoffending suggests a predictable pattern rather than isolated incidents.

Update: police just shot dead another man who had been pardoned.

A Century Apart: New Presidential Order Brings Back Infrastructure of Hate

When President Wilson screened “Birth of a Nation” (based on the book Clansman) at the White House in 1915, he didn’t just show a film – he sent a signal that legitimized racial violence under the banner of “free speech.”

President Wilson campaigned as “America First” in 1915 and then spread propaganda about “crusaders” costumed in white robes with X logos, including “hooked” versions associated more with Nazis as their “luck” swastika. State sanctioned racist violence became so normalized by 1921 wealthy white businessmen flew planes to napalm American Black property owners.

The film’s extremely controversial nationwide release, protected and promoted by racists as free expression, helped fuel the resurging Ku Klux Klan and contributed to the tensions that erupted in the Red Summer of 1919, when white supremacist mobs violently attacked Black communities to destroy over 30 cities across America. Deaths still are underestimated to this day as the hidden mass graves of President Wilson’s “America First” campaign haven’t yet been properly recorded and exposed, let alone exhumed.

The film’s defenders falsely claimed they were protecting artistic freedom and historical expression. The bogus “freedom” argument provided cover for hate speech meant to incite and help coordinate campaigns of intimidation and violence.

The subsequent racial violence that exploded in 1919, after Wilson had pushed anti-liberal extremism for years, meant groundwork had been laid in normalized discrimination cloaked in the language of liberty.

Trump’s 2025 “ENDING FEDERAL CENSORSHIP” executive order similarly falsely wraps itself in First Amendment language meant to rush the dismantling of content moderation systems. The rollback of AI safeguards announced by Twitter and Facebook – social media companies’ retreat from content oversight – means we’re seeing a similar pattern: official policies that enable and legitimize coordinated harassment under the guise of protecting freedom.

Just as Wilson’s actions went beyond a simple domestic terrorism film screening to signal broader social permission for low-level widespread violence, today’s changes represent more than mere policy shifts. They create an infrastructure where targeted harassment and discrimination can flourish while claiming constitutional protection.

The echoes of President Wilson’s reign of terror by 1915 “America First” adherents remind us that when government actions delegitimize safeguards against organized hate, the consequences can be far-reaching and extremely violent.

One hundred years ago, America suffered through one of the biggest outbreaks of racial violence against African Americans in its history, and few people know about it.

Few people know about it because there was no freedom allowed to talk about the violence, only freedom given for the hate speech to create it. America literally erased public mentions of the early 1900s racist riots, fire bombings and shootings.

Here’s a perfect example of the hypocrisy and propaganda tactics. At the same time this executive order claims to end ALL federal censorship… an opposite executive order was given to censor all federal speech (communications were ordered completely shutdown in the agency that warns about public safety risks). That’s the tightly controlled speech model of dictatorships for you, similar to how Goebbels centralized all radio for Hitler and labeled the heavy censorship as freedom for Nazis.

Mass graves from America First violence in 1921 still hidden and unstudied in 2024 should say it all. There was more than enough freedom granted for white supremacist hate speech, and none granted to talk about stopping it, because it suited the white men in power to keep things heavily lopsided that way.

President Wilson’s restart of the KKK adopted the 1800s racist nativist slogan “America First” and soon after began wearing white robes as depicted in the racist film “Birth of a Nation”.

Today Trump speaks in identical terms as a President Wilson about going back, rebirth of white nationalist power by removing safeguards meant to prevent racist violence. And somehow people don’t notice the obvious repeat. He claims ignorance of the century-old violent white nationalist hate campaigns he promotes, to normalize incitement as protected speech.

Trump often promoted Wilson’s hateful “America First” platform as his own

Ask yourself this: what is the role of technology then (planes with napalm) versus now (AI with crypto)?