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“Trust Me, He’s a Terrorist” — The New American Due Process

“Trust Me, He’s a Terrorist” — The New American Due Process

A 19-year-old Venezuelan boy, who came to the U.S. legally, with no gang ties, no tattoos, and no criminal record, just vanished. Not into thin air—into El Salvador’s mega-prison.

And here’s the kicker: they weren’t even looking for him

Agents were searching for someone else. Stumbled across him. Took him anyway. Admitted it. Because now in the Land of the Free, “close enough” is apparently good enough for deportation.

His parents only found out where he was after nearly a month of panic—by scrolling social media. Because in this new America, you don’t get a court date, a phone call, or even a name on a list. Just a cell with 80 men and two toilets in a foreign prison.

And while Trump and Stephen Miller strut around claiming the Supreme Court is on their side, that same Court ruling explicitly said: people have a right to judicial review. A right to know why they’re being detained. A right to due process.

But those rights are becoming optional.

So ask yourself: is this the America you want?

Where the government can say, “Trust us, he’s a terrorist,” and that’s it?

No trial. No evidence. Just a social media post showing your missing loved one shackled in a foreign prison.

Welcome to the dystopia.

Where due process went on vacation—and never came back.