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Home Politics

Judge Slams Trump’s 18th Century Deportation Tactic—Calls It a ‘Legal Overreach’

Staff Reporter by Staff Reporter
March 16, 2025
in Politics
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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Trump Prepares for Round Two: Wildfires Threaten the Script
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A Law from 1798, A Crisis from 2025

It is a truth universally acknowledged (or at least should be) that when a government starts digging through history books for legal justification, things are about to get ugly. And that’s exactly what happened when former President Donald Trump, in his latest display of “law and order” theatrics, invoked the Alien Enemies Act—a law older than steam locomotives—to fast-track deportations of alleged Venezuelan gang members.

The problem? A federal judge wasn’t having it.

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U.S. District Judge James E. Boasberg issued an immediate block on the deportations, calling it what it was—an unlawful power grab wrapped in the thin veil of national security. The ruling came just hours after Trump signed his executive order, attempting to use this 18th-century relic to deport people without due process.

Because nothing screams “modern governance” like dragging out wartime laws from an era when people still thought leeches cured diseases.


History Has a Way of Repeating Itself

For those unfamiliar, the Alien Enemies Act was originally designed to allow the U.S. government to detain or deport nationals of hostile nations during wartime. It has only been used three times before—most notably during World War II, when it helped justify the internment of Japanese-Americans, Germans, and Italians. That chapter, widely regarded as a dark stain on American history, is now being flipped open again.

Trump’s justification? A claim that Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang is waging a “criminal invasion” of the United States, making the country’s undocumented Venezuelan population fair game for expedited deportation.

Judge Boasberg, however, wasn’t buying it. He ordered planes already in the air to turn around and grounded further deportations for at least 14 days. In his words:

“A brief delay in their removal does not cause the government any harm.”

A subtle but clear rebuke. The government’s eagerness to throw people onto flights—without real due process—was, in fact, the real harm being done.


The Human Cost of a Presidential Power Trip

This isn’t just about legal precedent. Behind every headline is a human life thrown into uncertainty. Take Henry Carmona, a Venezuelan asylum seeker who fled after receiving death threats. He stood in Florida, hoping for protection—only to be caught in this political crossfire. Or Jhoan Bastidas, deported straight from Guantanamo Bay back to the very instability he tried to escape.

The majority of Venezuelans arriving in the U.S. are not criminals, but victims—people fleeing an economy wrecked by corruption and authoritarianism. They are here for survival, not conquest. And yet, Trump’s rhetoric has lumped them into a monolithic “threat,” fueling policies that punish rather than protect.

It’s the oldest trick in the book: find a scapegoat, whip up fear, and push an agenda. And this time, the target is a group that has already lost everything once.


Weaponizing Law Against the Powerless

Trump and his allies argue that the Alien Enemies Act gives the president full authority to remove “threats” to national security. They cite post-9/11 laws that allowed the government to detain foreign nationals linked to terrorism. But legal experts—including the ACLU—counter that this interpretation is dangerously broad.

“This order disregards well-established authority regarding presidential power, and it puts the public and law enforcement at risk,” said Attorney General Pam Bondi, defending Trump’s move.

But let’s be clear—this isn’t about public safety. If it were, Trump’s administration wouldn’t be cherry-picking laws from centuries past while ignoring constitutional safeguards. What we are witnessing is a dangerous precedent: the weaponization of executive power against the most vulnerable.

And once such a precedent is set, who’s next? If a president can arbitrarily declare a gang an “enemy force” today, what stops them from doing the same to other groups tomorrow?


The Bigger Picture: A Slow March Toward Authoritarianism

This isn’t an isolated case—it’s part of a broader pattern. Since his first term, Trump has pushed the boundaries of presidential power, normalizing authoritarian tactics under the guise of national security. From family separations at the border to sending migrants to Guantanamo, his playbook has remained the same:

  1. Manufacture a crisis.
  2. Use it to justify extreme measures.
  3. Blame the courts when those measures are struck down.

The courts, for now, have held the line. But legal battles like this are a reminder that democracy is not self-sustaining. The next time a president tries to expand their power, the resistance may not be as strong.

And if history has taught us anything, it’s that when the government starts bending laws to serve its agenda, the people who suffer most are always the powerless.

For now, the deportation flights have been grounded. But the question remains: how long before another leader tries to resurrect yet another long-forgotten law to justify injustice?

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