Strategic Alliance, Civilian Devastation, And The Limits Of International Law: A Structural Analysis Of U.S. – Israel Policy

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Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, before he was assassinated

The alliance between the United States and Israel is one of the most deeply insti­tu­tion­al­ized bilat­er­al secu­ri­ty rela­tion­ships in the mod­ern inter­na­tion­al sys­tem. It is anchored in for­mal mil­i­tary aid agree­ments, inte­grat­ed weapons devel­op­ment, intel­li­gence coör­di­na­tion, and diplo­mat­ic align­ment. At the same time, Israel’s recent mil­i­tary cam­paigns in Gaza have pro­duced extra­or­di­nary civil­ian destruc­tion, rais­ing severe legal, moral, and geopo­lit­i­cal questions.

  1. The U.S. mate­ri­al­ly enables Israel’s mil­i­tary campaigns.

  2. The scale of civil­ian harm rais­es seri­ous pro­por­tion­al­i­ty concerns.

  3. Western enforce­ment of inter­na­tion­al law is not only incon­sis­tent, they are deeply incon­sis­tent and fun­da­men­tal­ly flawed.

  4. Strategic pri­or­i­ties repeat­ed­ly over­ride human­i­tar­i­an conditionality.

I. Material Enablement: The Mechanics of Military Sustainment

Since 1948, Israel has received more cumu­la­tive U.S. for­eign assis­tance than any oth­er coun­try. The cur­rent 10-year Memorandum of Understanding pro­vides $3.8 bil­lion annu­al­ly in mil­i­tary assis­tance. In addi­tion, emer­gency wartime appro­pri­a­tions have sup­ple­ment­ed this base­line dur­ing peri­ods of high-inten­si­ty con­flict. This aid is not sym­bol­ic. It trans­lates into:

  • Precision-guid­ed munitions

  • Artillery resup­ply

  • Missile defense interceptors

  • Advanced air­craft integration

  • Intelligence-shar­ing infrastructure

U.S. trans­fers have ensured that Israel retains esca­la­tion dom­i­nance and oper­a­tional con­ti­nu­ity; this has result­ed in Israel’s con­tin­ued assault on its neigh­bors to the point it has been accused of com­mit­ting geno­cide of the Palestinian peo­ple, and mil­i­tary assaults on Syria, Iran, on oth­er neigh­bors in the region. This is not abstract diplo­mat­ic sup­port. It is logis­ti­cal enable­ment. The alliance also guar­an­tees Israel’s “Qualitative Military Edge” (QME), mean­ing Israel must retain tech­no­log­i­cal supe­ri­or­i­ty over neigh­bor­ing states. That doc­trine struc­tural­ly embeds asym­me­try into region­al mil­i­tary bal­ance. Thus, when crit­ics argue that the U.S. has mate­ri­al­ly enabled destruc­tive cam­paigns, they are point­ing to sup­ply chains, fund­ing streams, and weapons sys­tems — not rhetoric.


II. Civilian Casualty Scale and Proportionality Under International Law

International human­i­tar­i­an law (IHL) rests on sev­er­al core principles:

  • Distinction

  • Proportionality

  • Military neces­si­ty

  • Precaution

Gaza is one of the most dense­ly pop­u­lat­ed ter­ri­to­ries in the world. Urban den­si­ty rad­i­cal­ly increas­es civil­ian expo­sure in mod­ern war­fare. The casu­al­ty fig­ures report­ed by Gaza health author­i­ties dur­ing the recent con­flict have reached into the tens of thou­sands, with mas­sive infra­struc­ture destruc­tion. Israel argues:

  • Hamas embeds with­in civil­ian structures.

  • Tunnel net­works exist beneath res­i­den­tial areas.

  • Military advan­tage jus­ti­fies tar­get­ing com­mand nodes and rock­et infrastructure.

Critics argue:

  • The destruc­tion of entire urban dis­tricts sug­gests force exceed­ing mil­i­tary necessity.

  • The pre­dictable civil­ian toll of heavy ord­nance in dense neigh­bor­hoods rais­es more than pro­por­tion­al­i­ty con­cerns; they speak to a wan­ton and reck­less, inhu­mane and sadis­tic desire to shed blood maximally.

  • Systemic infra­struc­ture dam­age (water, med­ical facil­i­ties, pow­er grids) has exceed­ed all sane expec­ta­tions of law­ful mil­i­tary objec­tives. The scale of destruc­tion has trig­gered inves­ti­ga­tions and legal scruti­ny inter­na­tion­al­ly. Whether indi­vid­ual strikes meet legal stan­dards requires a gran­u­lar assess­ment. But at a macro lev­el, the mag­ni­tude of civil­ian harm makes pro­por­tion­al­i­ty one of the most seri­ous unre­solved legal ques­tions of the con­flict. These ques­tions are not unre­solved in the minds of Western cor­po­rate media hous­es and the neo-cons who run them when it comes to the ques­tion of Russia’s war in Ukraine. In their minds, Russia is a bru­tal beast that has attacked its neigh­bor with­out provo­ca­tion or legal jus­ti­fi­ca­tion. Why is the nar­ra­tive in the two cases?

Netanyahu


III. International Law and Selective Enforcement

Western gov­ern­ments have imposed sweep­ing sanc­tions on Russia’s inva­sion of Ukraine. In con­trast, Israel’s set­tle­ment expan­sion in the West Bank — wide­ly regard­ed by much of the inter­na­tion­al com­mu­ni­ty as vio­lat­ing the Fourth Geneva Convention — has not trig­gered com­pa­ra­ble sanc­tions regimes from major Western pow­ers. Additionally, the United States has fre­quent­ly used its veto pow­er at the UN Security Council to block res­o­lu­tions crit­i­cal of Israel or call­ing for bind­ing cease­fires. From a con­sis­ten­cy stand­point, this pro­duces tension:
After the car­pet bomb­ing of Gaza, Israel and the United States now har­bor grand ideas of estab­lish­ing anoth­er Israeli city in the thin strip of land 144 square miles, 365 square kilo­me­ters), 6 – 12 kilo­me­ters wide, a space about the size of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with a pop­u­la­tion of 2.17 mil­lion people.
This would effec­tive­ly force the over two mil­lion Gazans into an even small­er space than they had before, or worse, com­plete­ly eth­ni­cal­ly cleanse them from the land they have inhab­it­ed for thou­sands of years. According to esti­mates, the Gaza Strip is already the most dense­ly pop­u­lat­ed area on our plan­et, yet the State of Israel, with the help of the United States and oth­er Western pow­ers, con­tin­ues to aid Israel as it eth­ni­cal­ly cleans­es Gaza of its indige­nous people.

  • Territorial acqui­si­tion by force is broad­ly pro­hib­it­ed under inter­na­tion­al law, as it should be.

  • Enforcement mech­a­nisms vary dra­mat­i­cal­ly by geopo­lit­i­cal con­text and Western interests.

  • Strategic allies always receive diplo­mat­ic insulation.

This incon­sis­ten­cy is almost unique to Israel. International law enforce­ment has his­tor­i­cal­ly been selec­tive. But in the Israeli-Palestinian con­text, it is the most vis­i­ble and sus­tained exam­ple. Thus, moral crit­ics argue that Western gov­ern­ments apply dou­ble stan­dards in the case of Israel. 


IV. Strategic Alignment vs. Humanitarian Leverage

The U.S. – Israel alliance oper­ates with­in a broad­er region­al frame­work that includes:

  • Deterrence of Iran

  • Intelligence inte­gra­tion

  • Defense-indus­tri­al interdependence

  • Domestic polit­i­cal coali­tions in the United States

During active hos­til­i­ties, the U.S. has often urged restraint while con­tin­u­ing weapons trans­fers. Binding con­di­tion­al­i­ty — such as sus­pen­sion of offen­sive arms — has rarely been applied at scale. If human­i­tar­i­an pro­tec­tion were the over­rid­ing pri­or­i­ty, one might expect:

  • Immediate sus­pen­sion of high-impact munitions.

  • Strict con­di­tion­al­i­ty tied to civil­ian casu­al­ty metrics.

  • Sanctions linked to set­tle­ment expansion.

Instead, alliance sta­bil­i­ty and deter­rence pos­ture have remained cen­tral. This indi­cates a pri­or­i­ti­za­tion struc­ture that says region­al secu­ri­ty align­ment and geopo­lit­i­cal posi­tion­ing out­weigh max­i­mal human­i­tar­i­an lever­age. The ques­tion then becomes, is the United States wit­ting­ly or unwit­ting­ly engaged in a con­spir­a­cy with the State of Israel in spread­ing Zionist hege­mo­ny across Asia?


V. Regional Power and Escalation Dominance

Israel main­tains over­whelm­ing mil­i­tary supe­ri­or­i­ty rel­a­tive to its imme­di­ate neigh­bors. It pos­sess­es advanced air pow­er, mis­sile defense sys­tems, cyber capa­bil­i­ties, and — accord­ing to wide­spread defense assess­ments — an unde­clared nuclear arse­nal that no oth­er nation is allowed to have, and which America has gone to war with Iran over. Why is Israel allowed to have nuclear weapons, while no oth­er nation is allowed, out­side of those who already have them?
From a realpoli­tik per­spec­tive, Israel’s nuclear and con­ven­tion­al weapons dom­i­nance are argued, designed to pre­vent like-mind­ed coali­tions from coa­lesc­ing against the zion­ist state. Even in the face of raw Israeli aggres­sion and hege­mon­ic inten­tions, the flow of mon­ey and weapons to Israel con­tin­ues unabat­ed. From a human­i­tar­i­an per­spec­tive, nuclear weapons pro­duce high­ly asym­met­ric destruc­tion, par­tic­u­lar­ly in dense­ly pop­u­lat­ed the­aters that are far too con­se­quen­tial and dev­as­tat­ing to even con­tem­plate. Therefore, if oth­er nations are not allowed to have nuclear weapons, then Israel should be made to dis­man­tle its own nuclear arse­nal. Of the nations that we know that are nuclear-armed, the United States, England, France, China, Russia, India, Pakistan, only the United States has used a weapon of that kind in a the­ater of war. Yet the per­va­sive argu­ment ampli­fied by the United States is that Iran intends to acquire nuclear weapons, not as a deter­rent to aggres­sors like Israel, but as a means to destroy the zion­ist state.
It is dif­fi­cult to argue that chants of ‘death to Israel and death to America’. means Iran intend­ed to attack either nation, know­ing that that would mean its own annihilation./
No one argues that Netanyahu has been beat­ing the drums of war against the Islamic State for decades, behind the false claims that Iran was just months or even weeks from rolling out a nuclear bomb.
No one ques­tioned the per­for­ma­tive the­atrics of Netanyahu before the United Nations 

VI. The Core Structural Tension

When we inte­grate these dynam­ics, the result is not a secret manip­u­la­tion the­sis but a struc­tur­al alliance thesis:

  • The United States mate­ri­al­ly sus­tains Israeli mil­i­tary capability.

  • Civilian dev­as­ta­tion has reached lev­els that trig­ger seri­ous legal scrutiny.

  • Western enforce­ment of inter­na­tion­al law appears inconsistent.

  • Strategic deter­rence goals fre­quent­ly over­ride human­i­tar­i­an conditionality.

The alliance oper­ates as a high-pri­or­i­ty secu­ri­ty part­ner­ship in which geopo­lit­i­cal cal­cu­lus pre­dom­i­nates. That real­i­ty gen­er­ates pro­found moral and legal controversy.


Conclusion: Power Without Illusion

The U.S. – Israel rela­tion­ship reflects a con­ver­gence of strate­gic inter­ests, defense inte­gra­tion, and domes­tic polit­i­cal align­ment. It has enabled Israel to pros­e­cute high-inten­si­ty cam­paigns with sus­tained exter­nal back­ing. It has also insu­lat­ed Israel diplo­mat­i­cal­ly in ways that many observers view as incon­sis­tent with the uni­ver­sal appli­ca­tion of inter­na­tion­al law. The endur­ing ques­tion is not whether pow­er is being exer­cised. It clear­ly is. The ques­tion is whether the cur­rent con­fig­u­ra­tion of mil­i­tary dom­i­nance, selec­tive enforce­ment, and alliance pri­or­i­ti­za­tion will pro­duce long-term sta­bil­i­ty — or per­pet­u­ate cycles of destruc­tion that erode both legal norms and region­al equi­lib­ri­um, so will argue.
However, that time has long passed, the world is watch­ing in real time the con­se­quences of the ero­sion of the inter­na­tion­al order put in place after WW11, which has worked to some degree, at least to keep the world from anoth­er con­fla­gra­tion. The tragedy inher­ent in the col­lapse of the order may be placed square­ly at the feet of those who wrote the rules but decid­ed every­one should obey them, except them­selves. (MB)

Texas: Demographics And Politics

The state of Texas has under­gone one of the most dra­mat­ic demo­graph­ic shifts in the United States over the past sev­er­al decades. According to the 2020 Census and sub­se­quent esti­mates, Texas is now a major­i­ty-minor­i­ty state in terms of race and eth­nic­i­ty. Latinos — over­whelm­ing­ly of Mexican her­itage — now make up rough­ly 40% of the state’s pop­u­la­tion, mar­gin­al­ly sur­pass­ing non-Hispanic whites, who account for about 39.8%. Black Texans con­sti­tute around 12% and Asian Texans rough­ly 5%. Nearly 60% of Texans are peo­ple of col­or, and Hispanic res­i­dents are expect­ed to make up a major­i­ty with­in a gen­er­a­tion as younger gen­er­a­tions grow up. The Texas Tribune+1
At first glance, that kind of diver­si­ty might sug­gest a polit­i­cal realign­ment toward the Democratic Party. In the nation­al imag­i­na­tion, Latino vot­ers often lean Democratic, due in part to that party’s stances on immi­gra­tion, social ser­vices, and labor rights. But Texas remains staunch­ly con­ser­v­a­tive: Republicans con­trol every statewide office, both cham­bers of the state leg­is­la­ture, and a major­i­ty of the state’s U.S. House seats. Texas has not elect­ed a Democratic gov­er­nor since 1990 nor vot­ed for a Democratic pres­i­den­tial can­di­date since 1976. Wikipedia
So why does the Lone Star State remain so con­ser­v­a­tive despite a large and grow­ing Latino pop­u­la­tion? The answer lies in a com­bi­na­tion of demo­graph­ic dynam­ics, polit­i­cal struc­tures, and vot­er behavior.

1. Population vs. Electorate: Who Actually Votes
One of the key dis­tinc­tions in under­stand­ing Texas pol­i­tics is the dif­fer­ence between pop­u­la­tion and vot­ing-eli­gi­ble pop­u­la­tion. While Latinos are the largest group in Texas by total pop­u­la­tion, they are under­rep­re­sent­ed among vot­ers. A large por­tion of the Latino pop­u­la­tion is young; over half of Texans under the age of 18 are Latino, mean­ing they are not yet eli­gi­ble to vote. A sig­nif­i­cant share of the adult Latino pop­u­la­tion also con­sists of non-cit­i­zens, and many eli­gi­ble Latino vot­ers do not par­tic­i­pate at the same rates as non-Hispanic white vot­ers. tex­as­latinocon­ser­v­a­tives.com+1
In effect, non-Hispanic whites make up a larg­er share of actu­al vot­ers than their share of the over­all pop­u­la­tion would sug­gest. Voting turnout and eli­gi­bil­i­ty dis­tort the influ­ence of demo­graph­ics, so even as Latinos grow in num­ber, their elec­toral pow­er grows more slowly.

2. Political Alignment and Ideology Among Latino Voters
It’s also impor­tant not to assume that all Latino Texans vote as a mono­lith­ic bloc or that their polit­i­cal pref­er­ences align per­fect­ly with the nation­al pat­tern. Emerging trends show more com­plex polit­i­cal align­ments among Latino vot­ers in Texas. In some recent elec­tions, a greater share of Latino vot­ers sup­port­ed Republican can­di­dates than Democrats — in some cas­es a major­i­ty — although results can vary wide­ly by region and elec­tion year. This reflects the diver­si­ty with­in the Latino com­mu­ni­ty itself in terms of socioe­co­nom­ic sta­tus, reli­gion, immi­gra­tion expe­ri­ences, and views on issues like small busi­ness, fam­i­ly val­ues, and law enforce­ment. tex­as­latinoconservatives​.com
Moreover, cul­tur­al and socioe­co­nom­ic dif­fer­ences — such as low­er medi­an incomes and edu­ca­tion­al attain­ment in some Latino com­mu­ni­ties — can affect polit­i­cal mobi­liza­tion and pol­i­cy pri­or­i­ties, some­times lead­ing to low­er turnout rel­a­tive to oth­er groups.

3. Political Institutions and Party Strategies
Even if demo­graph­ic shifts are under­way, polit­i­cal insti­tu­tions and strate­gies can slow or shape their impact. In Texas, Republican leg­is­la­tors have craft­ed elec­toral maps in ways that pre­serve their party’s advan­tage, often by draw­ing dis­trict bound­aries that dis­trib­ute Democratic-lean­ing vot­ers across mul­ti­ple dis­tricts rather than con­cen­trat­ing them where they could elect their pre­ferred can­di­dates. This process — known as ger­ry­man­der­ing — can min­i­mize the impact of grow­ing minor­i­ty pop­u­la­tions on leg­isla­tive out­comes. TIME
Additionally, Texas does not allow statewide bal­lot ini­tia­tives or ref­er­en­dums, mean­ing that major changes in the polit­i­cal sys­tem must come through the leg­is­la­ture — which is con­trolled by Republicans. That con­trol gives the par­ty struc­tur­al advan­tages in shap­ing pol­i­cy and main­tain­ing power.

4. Geography and Political Culture
Finally, Texas’s deep-root­ed polit­i­cal cul­ture — shaped by fron­tier indi­vid­u­al­ism, eco­nom­ic con­ser­vatism, and a strong pref­er­ence for lim­it­ed gov­ern­ment — has encour­aged con­ser­v­a­tive iden­ti­fi­ca­tion across large swaths of the state, par­tic­u­lar­ly in rur­al and sub­ur­ban areas. Urban cen­ters like Houston, Austin, and Dallas are more com­pet­i­tive or Democratic-lean­ing, yet much of Texas remains polit­i­cal­ly con­ser­v­a­tive. These geo­graph­ic pat­terns reflect his­tor­i­cal set­tle­ment, eco­nom­ic pri­or­i­ties (like oil, agri­cul­ture, and busi­ness dereg­u­la­tion), and cul­tur­al val­ues that have long favored the Republican Party.

Conclusion: A Complex Political Landscape
In sum, Texas’s sta­tus as a con­ser­v­a­tive strong­hold along­side its large Latino pop­u­la­tion illus­trates how demog­ra­phy alone does not deter­mine pol­i­tics. While Latinos are the largest racial or eth­nic group in the state and will like­ly grow in influ­ence over com­ing decades, par­tic­i­pa­tion gaps, vot­er eli­gi­bil­i­ty, polit­i­cal realign­ment pat­terns, insti­tu­tion­al rules, and strate­gic redis­trictin­gall help explain why Texas remains firm­ly con­ser­v­a­tive today.
The sto­ry of Texas thus high­lights a broad­er les­son in American pol­i­tics: pop­u­la­tion change sets the stage, but polit­i­cal pow­er emerges only when pop­u­la­tion trans­lates into elec­toral engage­ment and rep­re­sen­ta­tion — a process that varies sig­nif­i­cant­ly across states and communities.
Having said the fore­gone, it is clear that Hispanics/​Latinos do not nec­es­sar­i­ly sup­port the par­ty that is more in tune with thrown inter­ests bely­ing the nar­ra­tive that Democrats allow America’s bor­ders to be infil­trat­ed by mil­lions of ille­gal entrants in order to gain votes.
Hispanics/​Latinos, have demon­strat­ed that even if it was true that Democrats allowed them in as future vot­ers, there is no evi­dence that that strat­e­gy has paid any div­i­dends for the party.
1. Blocking bipar­ti­san com­pre­hen­sive bills
  • In 2006 – 2007, a bipar­ti­san immi­gra­tion reform pack­age under President George W. Bush passed the Senate but failed in the House after strong con­ser­v­a­tive backlash.
  • In 2013, the Senate’s “Gang of Eight” bill — under President Barack Obama — again passed with bipar­ti­san sup­port but was not brought to a vote in the Republican-con­trolled House.
Critics argue House lead­er­ship avoid­ed votes that might split their cau­cus, effec­tive­ly stalling reform.
2. Emphasis on enforce­ment-first framing
Many Republican law­mak­ers insist­ed on bor­der secu­ri­ty mea­sures before con­sid­er­ing legal­iza­tion path­ways. Opponents say this sequenc­ing often func­tioned as a de fac­to veto, since agree­ment on what con­sti­tut­ed “secure” was elusive.
3. Primary-elec­tion pressures
Hardline immi­gra­tion stances became influ­en­tial in Republican pri­maries, espe­cial­ly after the rise of pop­ulist fac­tions. Lawmakers risked pri­ma­ry chal­lenges if seen as sup­port­ing “amnesty,” which dis­cour­aged compromise.
4. Political incen­tive structure
Some ana­lysts con­tend immi­gra­tion became a mobi­liz­ing issue — ener­giz­ing por­tions of the GOP base through cam­paign mes­sag­ing about bor­der secu­ri­ty, crime, and nation­al iden­ti­ty. Under this view, keep­ing the issue unre­solved pre­served its val­ue as a cam­paign “light­ning rod.”
It’s worth not­ing that Republicans counter that:
  • Proposed reforms often lacked suf­fi­cient enforce­ment provisions.
  • Executive actions (such as DACA expan­sions) reduced trust in bipar­ti­san negotiations.
  • Democrats also had peri­ods of uni­fied con­trol but did not pass last­ing reform.
In short, crit­ics argue that inter­nal par­ty dynam­ics, elec­toral incen­tives, and strate­gic cal­cu­la­tions led many Republicans to block or avoid com­pre­hen­sive immi­gra­tion reform votes, help­ing keep immi­gra­tion as a potent cam­paign issue. Supporters of the par­ty frame the same his­to­ry as prin­ci­pled oppo­si­tion to flawed leg­is­la­tion rather than delib­er­ate obstruction.
Sources

Authoritarian Parallels: A Structural Comparison Of Trumpism And Early Nazi Governance

Comparative polit­i­cal analy­sis often exam­ines his­tor­i­cal regimes not to declare them iden­ti­cal, but to iden­ti­fy recur­ring author­i­tar­i­an mech­a­nisms. Scholars of fas­cism and demo­c­ra­t­ic back­slid­ing have long not­ed that author­i­tar­i­an move­ments tend to rely on a rec­og­niz­able set of strate­gies: dele­git­imiz­ing truth, scape­goat­ing minori­ties, erod­ing insti­tu­tion­al inde­pen­dence, and refram­ing democ­ra­cy as valid only when it pro­duces desired outcomes.
This arti­cle presents a point-by-point com­par­i­son between the meth­ods used by the Nazi Party dur­ing its con­sol­i­da­tion of pow­er in Germany (approx­i­mate­ly 1933 – 1939) and those employed by Donald Trump and the polit­i­cal move­ment orga­nized around him known as MAGA.
In Nazi Germany, the régime tar­get­ed intel­lec­tu­al and cul­tur­al insti­tu­tions as sources of ide­o­log­i­cal con­t­a­m­i­na­tion. Book burn­ings, purges of uni­ver­si­ties, and state con­trol of art and schol­ar­ship served to elim­i­nate dis­sent­ing ideas and replace inquiry with orthodoxy.
Under Trumpism, there has been cen­tral­ized attacks on books deemed woke, there has been sus­tained polit­i­cal pres­sure against uni­ver­si­ties, edu­ca­tors, librar­i­ans, and cul­tur­al insti­tu­tions. Schools and aca­d­e­m­ic spaces were framed as ide­o­log­i­cal ene­mies, and efforts were made — often through allied state-lev­el actors — to restrict cur­ric­u­la and defund insti­tu­tions accused of pro­mot­ing unpa­tri­ot­ic or sub­ver­sive ideas. in some cas­es there has been exclu­sions of books from libraries and even book burn­ing. In both cas­es, inde­pen­dent knowl­edge pro­duc­tion was treat­ed as a threat to nation­al cohesion.
Trump has des­e­crat­ed the non-par­ti­san Kennedy cen­ter by adding his name to the cul­tur­al cen­ter. Any changes to the cen­ter in that regad is report­ed to require an act of Congress, none was sought, none was given.
This act of pres­i­den­tial takeover and des­e­cra­tion caused a back­lask of can­cel­la­tions from Acts booked to per­form at the cen­ter. Faced with the prospect of hav­ing no book­ings Donald Trump closed the cen­ter and lied that he did so to effec­tu­ate much need­ed repairs.
Workers fami­lar with the facil­i­ty argues the build­ing is in great shape.

A cen­tral fea­ture of Nazi gov­er­nance was the iden­ti­fi­ca­tion of inter­nal ene­mies — most notably Jews, Roma, and polit­i­cal dis­si­dents — who were blamed for eco­nom­ic hard­ship, moral decline, and nation­al humil­i­a­tion. Dehumanizing lan­guage framed these groups as con­t­a­m­i­nants with­in the body politic.
Trump’s rhetoric sim­i­lar­ly relied on scape­goat­ing, par­tic­u­lar­ly of immi­grants and minori­ties. Migrants were repeat­ed­ly described as crim­i­nals, invaders, or vec­tors of social decay. Donald Trump claimed that Immigrants were poi­son­ing the blood of America. The lan­guage of con­t­a­m­i­na­tion and exis­ten­tial threat func­tioned to redi­rect pub­lic frus­tra­tion away from insti­tu­tions and toward vul­ner­a­ble pop­u­la­tions. In both cas­es, polit­i­cal legit­i­ma­cy was rein­forced through the iden­ti­fi­ca­tion of an inter­nal “oth­er.”
Nazi depor­ta­tion poli­cies were framed not mere­ly as admin­is­tra­tive actions but as sym­bol­ic acts of nation­al purifi­ca­tion. Removal of “unde­sir­able” pop­u­la­tions was pre­sent­ed as a nec­es­sary step toward restor­ing order and strength.
Trump repeat­ed­ly empha­sized mass depor­ta­tion as a defin­ing polit­i­cal promise, fram­ing it as a solu­tion to nation­al decline. Deportation func­tioned as spec­ta­cle as much as pol­i­cy, sig­nal­ing dom­i­nance, deter­rence, and ide­o­log­i­cal resolve. In both con­texts, depor­ta­tion served as a pub­lic asser­tion of sov­er­eign power.

Early Nazi con­cen­tra­tion camps were ini­tial­ly used to detain polit­i­cal oppo­nents and mar­gin­al­ized groups out­side ordi­nary judi­cial process­es, nor­mal­iz­ing extra­ju­di­cial confinement.
During the Trump admin­is­tra­tion, large-scale immi­gra­tion deten­tion — often involv­ing pro­longed con­fine­ment of fam­i­lies and chil­dren — became a core enforce­ment strat­e­gy. While oper­at­ing with­in a dif­fer­ent legal frame­work, deten­tion was sim­i­lar­ly used as a deter­rent and dis­ci­pli­nary tool, with bureau­crat­ic process­es obscur­ing indi­vid­ual suf­fer­ing. In both cas­es, con­fine­ment was nor­mal­ized as an accept­able polit­i­cal instrument.
Nazi Germany replaced insti­tu­tion­al account­abil­i­ty with per­son­al loy­al­ty through orga­ni­za­tions such as the SS and Gestapo, ensur­ing that enforce­ment pow­er served the leader rather than the law.
Trump repeat­ed­ly demand­ed per­son­al loy­al­ty from law enforce­ment and jus­tice offi­cials, crit­i­ciz­ing or remov­ing those who upheld insti­tu­tion­al inde­pen­dence. Civil ser­vants and inves­ti­ga­tors were por­trayed as ene­mies when they resist­ed polit­i­cal inter­fer­ence. The shared pat­tern lies in the pref­er­ence for loy­al­ty to the leader over loy­al­ty to neu­tral institutions.
The Nazi Party treat­ed elec­tions as legit­i­mate only when they pro­duced favor­able out­comes, using claims of fraud and emer­gency con­di­tions to jus­ti­fy demo­c­ra­t­ic erosion.
Trump sim­i­lar­ly assert­ed that elec­tions were fraud­u­lent unless he won them, both before and after votes were cast. Persistent dele­git­imiza­tion of elec­toral out­comes and pres­sure on offi­cials to alter results under­mined pub­lic trust in demo­c­ra­t­ic process­es. In both cas­es, elec­tions were reframed as con­fir­ma­tion mech­a­nisms rather than gen­uine contests.

Nazi pro­pa­gan­da relied on the rep­e­ti­tion of false­hoods until they became accept­ed as real­i­ty, with truth defined by align­ment with the régime.
Trump nor­mal­ized demon­stra­bly false claims, attacked fact-check­ing insti­tu­tions, and framed exper­tise as par­ti­san manip­u­la­tion. Truth became a mark­er of loy­al­ty rather than evi­dence. The par­al­lel lies in the ero­sion of shared real­i­ty as a foun­da­tion for demo­c­ra­t­ic discourse.
Nazi ral­lies empha­sized spec­ta­cle, sym­bol­ism, and emo­tion­al uni­ty, bypass­ing delib­er­a­tion in favor of mass iden­ti­fi­ca­tion with the leader.
Trump’s polit­i­cal style sim­i­lar­ly cen­tered on ral­lies, direct com­mu­ni­ca­tion, and per­for­ma­tive pol­i­tics. Emotional res­o­nance con­sis­tent­ly out­weighed pol­i­cy detail, rein­forc­ing per­son­al iden­ti­fi­ca­tion with lead­er­ship over insti­tu­tion­al processes.
Independent jour­nal­ism posed a threat to Nazi con­trol and was elim­i­nat­ed or absorbed into state propaganda.
Trump labeled the press “the ene­my of the peo­ple,” sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly dis­cred­it­ing unfa­vor­able report­ing and encour­ag­ing pub­lic hos­til­i­ty toward jour­nal­ists. While media inde­pen­dence per­sist­ed, the tac­tic of dele­git­imiz­ing the press fol­lowed a famil­iar author­i­tar­i­an pattern.

Nazi author­i­ties purged the civ­il ser­vice of non-loy­al­ists, refram­ing pro­fes­sion­al neu­tral­i­ty as sabotage.
Trump pop­u­lar­ized the con­cept of a con­spir­a­to­r­i­al “deep state,” por­tray­ing career offi­cials as ene­mies of the peo­ple. Watchdog insti­tu­tions and inspec­tors were tar­get­ed when they con­strained exec­u­tive pow­er. In both cas­es, neu­tral gov­er­nance was recast as subversion.
Nazi ide­ol­o­gy explic­it­ly placed the leader’s will above legal constraint.
Trump advanced claims of exec­u­tive immu­ni­ty, attacked judges who ruled against him, and framed legal account­abil­i­ty as per­se­cu­tion. The shared mech­a­nism is the ele­va­tion of per­son­al author­i­ty over rule of law.
Nazi pro­pa­gan­da relied on nar­ra­tives of humil­i­a­tion and betray­al, promis­ing nation­al rebirth through strength and exclusion.
Trump’s mes­sag­ing sim­i­lar­ly empha­sized decline, vic­tim­hood, and restora­tion through dom­i­na­tion. In both cas­es, griev­ance func­tioned as a mobi­liz­ing myth.

Nazi street violence was tolerated and rhetorically justified as defensive action against enemies of the nation.

Trump min­i­mized, encour­aged, or excused vio­lence by sup­port­ers, fram­ing it as under­stand­able or patri­ot­ic. Political oppo­nents were por­trayed as exis­ten­tial threats, low­er­ing the thresh­old for vio­lent jus­ti­fi­ca­tion. Nazi def­i­n­i­tions of cit­i­zen­ship cen­tered on racial and ide­o­log­i­cal conformity.
Trump repeat­ed­ly invoked a vision of “real Americans,” defin­ing nation­al belong­ing in cul­tur­al and ide­o­log­i­cal terms rather than civic ones. The nation became some­thing to be defend­ed from inter­nal ene­mies rather than shared among equals.
The sim­i­lar­i­ties out­lined above do not rest on claims of iden­ti­cal out­comes or inten­tions. Instead, they reflect recur­ring author­i­tar­i­an strate­gies observ­able across his­tor­i­cal con­texts. By exam­in­ing these par­al­lels struc­tural­ly, rather than emo­tion­al­ly, it becomes pos­si­ble to iden­ti­fy ear­ly warn­ing signs of demo­c­ra­t­ic ero­sion and under­stand how author­i­tar­i­an move­ments adapt famil­iar tools to new polit­i­cal environments.
Comparative analy­sis is not about col­laps­ing his­to­ry into equiv­a­lence; it is about rec­og­niz­ing pat­terns before they hard­en into permanence.

Threats Against The Prime Minister’s Life Are Dangerous And Should Be Fully Run Down..

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Any threat against the life of Jamaica’s Prime Minister must be imme­di­ate­ly and unequiv­o­cal­ly condemned. 
There can be no ambi­gu­i­ty on this point. Political rival­ry is not war­fare, and lead­er­ship dis­agree­ment is not a license for intimidation. 
Threatening vio­lence against a head of gov­ern­ment is an attack on the demo­c­ra­t­ic order itself — one that must be treat­ed with max­i­mum seri­ous­ness by law enforce­ment. Every such threat must be ful­ly inves­ti­gat­ed, run down to its source, and every per­pe­tra­tor brought to jus­tice — swift­ly, pub­licly, and decisively.

Andrew Holness

Jamaicans know all too well where polit­i­cal vio­lence leads. We have walked that road before. We buried the vic­tims, count­ed the com­mu­ni­ties torn apart, and watched our polit­i­cal cul­ture teeter on the brink. 
The scars remain. That dark chap­ter taught us hard lessons: that rhetoric can kill, that dis­in­for­ma­tion can mobi­lize mobs, and that reck­less polit­i­cal lead­er­ship has real, bloody con­se­quences.
Which is why today’s return to vio­lent rhetoric is so dangerous.
The cur­rent atmos­phere did not arise by acci­dent. It has been stoked — delib­er­ate­ly — by a style of pol­i­tics root­ed not in facts but in provo­ca­tion, dis­tor­tion, and emo­tion­al manip­u­la­tion. The leader of the People’s National Party has, through a cam­paign of exag­ger­a­tions, selec­tive truth, and open dis­in­for­ma­tion, helped cre­ate an envi­ron­ment where rage mas­quer­ades as patri­o­tism and hos­til­i­ty sub­sti­tutes for argu­ment. It is the text­book recipe for esca­la­tion: con­vince sup­port­ers they are under exis­ten­tial threat, por­tray oppo­nents as ene­mies rather than fel­low Jamaicans, and drown facts beneath noise.

That polit­i­cal play­book has consequences.
Violent rhetoric does not remain rhetor­i­cal for long. History shows this with bru­tal clar­i­ty — not just in Jamaica, but across the world. When polit­i­cal lead­ers nor­mal­ize extrem­ism or encour­age griev­ance with­out ground­ing it in truth, unsta­ble indi­vid­u­als inter­pret those sig­nals as per­mis­sion. Online vit­ri­ol becomes phys­i­cal men­ace. Chants become threats. And threats become action. Some defend­ers argue that lead­ers can­not be respon­si­ble for the behav­ior of extrem­ists. Legally, per­haps not. Morally and polit­i­cal­ly, absolute­ly. Leadership means own­ing the cli­mate you cre­ate. When your mes­sag­ing is laced with per­son­al attacks, half-truths, demo­niza­tion, and appeals to griev­ance rather than rea­son, you are not just oppo­si­tion — you are an accel­er­ant. You become gaso­line to the fire you create.
Mark Golding and his band of unpa­tri­ot­ic atten­tion seek­ers are recre­at­ing a Jamaica we eschewed as we look for a brighter future built on a foun­da­tion of hard work and per­son­al responsibility.
Maintaining a polit­i­cal move­ment based sole­ly on the igno­rance and a sense of enti­tle­ment of sup­port­ers is not just a dere­lic­tion of respon­si­bil­i­ty; it is, at the very least, treasonous.

Mark Golding..

Jamaica worked too hard to climb out of the pit of polit­i­cal­ly fueled vio­lence to return to it now.
We delib­er­ate­ly turned toward com­mu­ni­ty peace ini­tia­tives, elec­toral reforms, bipar­ti­san restraint, and pub­lic cam­paigns for polit­i­cal decen­cy. We taught a new gen­er­a­tion that bal­lots replace bul­lets — that dis­agree­ment belongs in debates, not in grave­yards. That progress must not be undone by the ambi­tions of any sin­gle politi­cian seek­ing rel­e­vance through outrage.
Threats against the Prime Minister — or any polit­i­cal fig­ure — must nev­er be dis­missed as “noise,” nor exploit­ed for par­ti­san advan­tage. This is not about par­ty loy­al­ty; it is about nation­al sur­vival. A demo­c­ra­t­ic state can­not allow its lead­ers to gov­ern under vio­lent intim­i­da­tion, nor tol­er­ate mes­sag­ing that encour­ages it. The rule of law demands firm action — thor­ough inves­ti­ga­tions, pros­e­cu­tions where war­rant­ed, and trans­par­ent account­abil­i­ty for those who man­u­fac­ture threats.

But enforce­ment alone is not enough. Our polit­i­cal cul­ture must also reassert its red lines:

  • No lies dressed as activism.
  • No griev­ance mas­querad­ing as patriotism.
  • No dehu­man­iza­tion in ser­vice of votes.
  • And no tol­er­ance for rhetoric that makes vio­lence think­able.

The Opposition has a con­sti­tu­tion­al duty to crit­i­cize the gov­ern­ment — fierce­ly, even — but it also car­ries a respon­si­bil­i­ty to pro­tect demo­c­ra­t­ic sta­bil­i­ty. Leadership is mea­sured not by how loud­ly one shouts, but by how respon­si­bly one speaks. Inflaming the pub­lic for polit­i­cal advan­tage is the behav­ior of a dem­a­gogue, not a states­man. This is the moment for Jamaica to choose its direc­tion again. We can allow polit­i­cal dis­course to descend back into the gut­ter of hos­til­i­ty that once made the island syn­ony­mous with elec­toral blood­shed — or we can defend the hard-fought matu­ri­ty of our democ­ra­cy by demand­ing high­er stan­dards from all who seek to gov­ern. The dis­gust­ing threats against the Prime Minister must be con­demned with­out qual­i­fi­ca­tion. They must be pur­sued with­out hes­i­ta­tion. And the cul­ture that nur­tures those threats — built on lies, provo­ca­tion, and reck­less rhetoric — must be dis­man­tled just as vig­or­ous­ly. Because the safe­ty of one leader is not mere­ly per­son­al. It is sym­bol­ic. When any polit­i­cal office hold­er is threat­ened, what stands under assault is the nation’s belief that pow­er is trans­ferred by law — — -not fear.
Jamaica’s democ­ra­cy is stronger than any dem­a­gogue. But it requires vig­i­lance to stay that way.
As a mea­sure of my seri­ous­ness on this, I am will­ing to vol­un­teer my time with a team of like-mind­ed patri­ots to hunt down and bring to jus­tice these igno­rant and vio­lent indi­vid­u­als who believe that free speech gives them the right to prop­a­gate death threats and acts of intimidation.
We either bring them to jus­tice or bring jus­tice to them.
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