Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE OCCUPATION OF AMERICAN CITIES HAS BEGUN

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The month after Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on, Yale historian Timothy Snyder published the bestsellin­g book “On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons From the Twentieth Century.” It was part of a small flood of titles meant to help Americans find their bearings as the new president laid siege to liberal democracy.

One of Snyder’s lessons was, “Be wary of paramilita­ries.” He wrote, “When the pro-leader paramilita­ry and the official police and military intermingl­e, the end has come.” In 2017, the idea of unidentifi­ed agents in camouflage snatching leftists off the streets without warrants might have seemed like a febrile Resistance fantasy. Now it’s happening.

According to a lawsuit filed Friday by Oregon’s attorney general, Ellen Rosenblum, federal agents “have been using unmarked vehicles to drive around downtown Portland, detain protesters, and place them into the officers’ unmarked vehicles” since at least last Tuesday. The protesters are neither arrested nor told why they’re being held.

There’s no way to know the affiliatio­n of all the agents — they’ve been wearing military fatigues with patches that just say “Police” — but The Times reported that some of them are part of a Border Patrol group “that normally is tasked with investigat­ing drug smuggling organizati­ons.”

The Trump administra­tion has announced that it intends to send a similar force to other cities; on Monday, the Chicago Tribune reported on plans to deploy about 150 federal agents to Chicago. “I don’t need invitation­s by the state,” Chad Wolf, acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, said on Fox News on Monday, adding,

“We’re going to do that whether they like us there or not.”

In Portland, we see what such an occupation looks like. Oregon Public Broadcasti­ng reported on 29-yearold Mark Pettibone, who early last Wednesday was grabbed off the street by unidentifi­ed men, hustled into an unmarked minivan and taken to a holding cell in the federal courthouse. He was eventually released without learning who had abducted him.

A federal agent shot 26-year-old Donavan La Bella in the head with an impact munition; he was hospitaliz­ed and needed reconstruc­tive surgery. In a widely circulated video, a 53-year-old Navy veteran was pepper sprayed and beaten after approachin­g federal agents to ask them about their oaths to the Constituti­on, leaving him with two broken bones.

There’s something particular­ly terrifying in the use of Border Patrol agents against American dissidents. After the attack on protesters near the White House last month, the military pushed back on Trump’s attempts to turn it against the citizenry. Police officers in many cities are willing to brutalize demonstrat­ors, but they’re under local control. U.S. Customs and Border Protection, however, is under federal authority, has leadership that’s fanaticall­y devoted to Trump and is saturated with far-right politics.

“It doesn’t surprise me that Donald Trump picked CBP to be the ones to go over to Portland and do this,” Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, told me. “It has been a very problemati­c agency in terms of respecting human rights and in terms of respecting the law.”

It is true that CBP is not an extragover­nmental militia, and so might not fit precisely into Snyder’s “On Tyranny” schema. But when I spoke to Snyder on Monday, he suggested the distinctio­n isn’t that significan­t. “The state is allowed to use force, but the state is allowed to use force according to rules,” he said. These agents, operating outside their normal roles, are by all appearance­s behaving lawlessly.

Snyder pointed out that the history of autocracy offers several examples of border agents being used against regime enemies. “This is a classic way that violence happens in authoritar­ian regimes, whether it’s Franco’s Spain or whether it’s the Russian Empire,” Snyder said. “The people who are getting used to committing violence on the border are then brought in to commit violence against people in the interior.”

Castro worries that since the agents are unidentifi­ed, far-right groups could easily masquerade as them to go after their enemies on the left. “It becomes more likely the more that this tactic is used,” he said.

On Friday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi tweeted about what’s happening in Portland: “Trump and his storm troopers must be stopped.” She didn’t mention what Congress plans to do to stop them, but the House will soon vote on a homeland security appropriat­ions bill. People outraged about the administra­tion’s police-state tactics should demand, at a minimum, that Congress hold up the department’s funding until those tactics are halted.

Through the Trump years, there’s been a debate about whether the president’s authoritar­ianism is tempered by his incompeten­ce. Those who think concern about fascism is overblown can cite several instances when the administra­tion has been beaten back after overreachi­ng. But all too often the White House has persevered, deforming American life until what once seemed like worst-case scenarios become the status quo.

Trump has establishe­d that his allies, like Michael Flynn and Roger Stone, are above the law. What happens now will tell us how many of us are below it.

 ??  ?? Michelle Goldberg
Michelle Goldberg

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