Expedited removal is the twenty‑first‑century descendant of the Indian Removal Act: a policy engineered for speed, distance, and silence. When a government normalizes exile without a hearing, it is not testing the margins of due process—it is erasing them, and the targets keep expanding until the line between non‑citizen and citizen turns to vapor.
Category: Fascism
How Elon Musk Went From Visionary to Villain in Record Time
Elon Musk, once celebrated as a visionary, is now unraveling under the weight of his own hubris. His chaotic mismanagement of Twitter (now "X") gutted its moderation, alienated advertisers, and turned it into a haven for spambots and extremists. Tesla, once synonymous with innovation, now struggles with delays, recalls, and regulatory scrutiny over its self-driving promises. Neuralink faces ethical concerns, Hyperloop fizzled out, and SpaceX’s achievements are overshadowed by Musk’s erratic behavior. His compulsive overpromising, questionable ethics, and reckless social media antics have transformed him from a tech icon into a self-destructive figure, more meme than mastermind.
Fascist Theology and Its Impact on Contemporary American Society
The overarching objective of this dissertation is to provide an in-depth exploration and understanding of fascist theology within the socio-political landscape of contemporary American society. This will be accomplished through a multi-dimensional approach that includes the following specific objectives.
Bridges Through Time: Spain’s Turbulent Past and the Echoes of Today
As we delve into the chapters of Spain’s history, you’ll discover a land that has witnessed the extremes of societal discord, mass migrations akin to the global movements we see today, the iron fist of a dictator reminiscent of some of today’s authoritarian leaders, and the indomitable spirit of resistance that resonates with modern-day quests for justice and democracy.
Methadone at IG Farben—Gustav Ehrhart & Max Bockmühl
During the late 1930s, Gustav Ehrhart and Max Bockmühl, both research chemists working at IG Farben’s Hoechst laboratories, successfully synthesized a novel compound later known as methadone. Although initially developed to mitigate Germany’s reliance on imported opiates, methadone’s significance would transcend its wartime origins, ultimately emerging as a crucial medication in modern pain management and opioid dependence treatment. Despite the obscurity of their personal histories, Ehrhart and Bockmühl’s pioneering achievement demonstrates how scientific discovery can evolve far beyond the political and historical circumstances of its inception, offering vital therapeutic benefits to countless patients worldwide.