Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Diktat by Due Process (draft 1)

 

Diktat by Due Process: How the Supreme Court and Trump Co-Authored Electoral Autocracy

There is a particular kind of vertigo that comes from watching an institution dismantle its own capacity for resistance using the vocabulary of restraint. That is what has happened to the federal judiciary over the past eighteen months, and it is worth being precise about the mechanism, because the precision is the whole point. This was not capture in the sense the comparative-authoritarianism literature usually means it — no loyalist justices installed on packed courts, no purges of independent judges, none of the crude instruments Orbán or Kaczyński required to bend their judiciaries to heel. The United States Supreme Court needed no such instruments. It simply voted, on its own initiative, using its own procedural discretion, to narrow the collective capacity of Article III courts to check the executive — while quietly reserving to itself, and itself alone, the power to ever say no. That is not capture. That is complicity, exercised through legalism, and it deserves to be named as such.

The Architecture of Consolidation

Start with Trump v. CASA, decided in June 2025, because it is the load-bearing wall of everything that follows. The question presented was narrow and technical — do federal district courts have the equitable authority to issue "universal" injunctions binding the government nationwide, or only relief tailored to the specific plaintiffs before them? Justice Barrett, writing for a 6-3 majority, answered no, grounding her reasoning in the Judiciary Act of 1789 and in a reading of Marbury v. Madison that cited the case only to pivot away from what Marbury actually stands for: that it is "emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is." Barrett invoked Marbury's authority, then used it to shrink the very apparatus Marbury exists to protect. The effect was immediate and structural. A district judge can still find an executive order patently unconstitutional — the majority did not dispute that lower courts retain this power even where the government's position is, in the Court's own words, "patently wrong" — but that judge can no longer stop the policy for anyone except the plaintiffs who happened to sue in that particular courtroom. Everyone else must wait. And the only body left standing that can deliver a final, nationwide word is the Supreme Court itself, arriving in its own time, on its own emergency docket, when it chooses.

Layer onto this Trump v. United States, decided a year earlier in 2024, and the picture sharpens considerably. The ruling did not, technically, place the president above the law — Chief Justice Roberts was careful to preserve, on paper, the principle that unofficial acts remain prosecutable. But the evidentiary architecture the Court built around that principle renders it close to a legal fiction. Prosecutors cannot introduce evidence of a president's official acts — internal communications, staff conversations, agency directives — even to establish the motive or context behind an unofficial crime. Courts are barred from inquiring into presidential motive at all when classifying conduct as official. And core constitutional powers, including control of the Department of Justice and the pardon power, are absolutely immune, full stop, no balancing test required. Barrett herself dissented from the evidence-exclusion piece, warning it would "hamstring" any real prosecution — and Roberts's response, tucked into a footnote, essentially conceded the point: prosecutors may point to the fact that an official act occurred and to what was exchanged for it, but they may never probe why. That "why" is precisely where corrupt intent lives. Strip it out, and you have built a structure innocent people never need and guilty people cannot be caught inside.

Then, in June 2026, the same term the Court struck down birthright citizenship, it decided Mullin v. Doe, and the pattern repeated at a different register. The question was whether the statutory bar on judicial review of Temporary Protected Status terminations — "there is no judicial review of any determination of the Secretary" — covers not just substantive country-conditions calls but procedural ones too, including whether the Secretary genuinely consulted other agencies as the statute requires. The Court said yes, closing off even the narrow procedural door that TPS holders' lawyers had tried to walk through. Same doctrine as CASA, different subject matter: a statute, an emergency posture, a ruling that forecloses review rather than exercises it.

Where the Doctrine Meets Bodies

It would be a mistake to treat any of this as abstract. Marimar Martinez, a U.S. citizen and Montessori teaching assistant, was shot five times by a Border Patrol agent in Chicago's Brighton Park neighborhood in October 2025, during an operation whose official narrative — that she rammed a federal vehicle — was later contradicted by video a judge ordered released. The agent's own text messages surfaced: "I fired 5 rounds and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book, boys." The federal charges against her were dropped. In Minneapolis, Operation Metro Surge left two U.S. citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, dead within the same month, shot by federal agents in circumstances that helped trigger a partial government shutdown when Democrats refused DHS funding without body-camera and warrant reforms. In Chicago's South Shore, roughly three hundred federal agents raided an apartment building and detained children for hours, zip-tied, while Governor Pritzker's own state government could not get federal authorities to disclose where those children were being held. And beneath all of it sat the Lyons Memo — an internal ICE directive authorizing agents to force entry into homes on the strength of an administrative removal warrant, no judge required, kept so quiet that agents were reportedly told not to take notes when briefed on it.

Mahmoud Khalil's case belongs in this same frame, and its statutory vintage is worth dwelling on. Secretary Rubio invoked INA §237(a)(4)(C) — a McCarthy-era provision from the 1952 McCarran-Walter Act, built for Cold War ideological exclusion — to place Khalil, a lawful permanent resident and Columbia graduate, into removal proceedings over protected political speech. The Third Circuit did not reach the First Amendment question at all. It ruled, in January 2026, that the federal district court lacked jurisdiction to hear his constitutional claims in the first instance, routing him instead through immigration court — the exact same jurisdiction-stripping logic that runs through CASA and Mullin, applied now to a green card holder's core political rights.

And when the Court did impose a real check — blocking the unilateral domestic deployment of the National Guard for interior immigration enforcement — the administration did not defy the ruling. It found a workaround. Customs and Border Protection, under commander-at-large Gregory Bovino, simply absorbed the mission the Guard had been blocked from performing, deploying into Chicago and Minneapolis under a different statutory hat. The Court closed one door; the executive found an unlocked window three feet away, because the ruling had addressed the vehicle, not the destination.

The Corollary: What Unaccountability Produces

If you want to see what this architecture yields when nobody is watching, look at Trump's own 2025 financial disclosure — a document his administration was legally obligated to file, not an opposition dossier. It reports $2.2 billion in income, more than triple 2024's $622 million, driven overwhelmingly by roughly $1.4 billion in cryptocurrency ventures launched days before and during his second inauguration, timed against a presidency actively rewriting federal crypto regulation in those same ventures' favor. Add twenty-one thousand securities trades across sixteen hundred companies, including a cluster of tech-stock purchases made the same day the White House unveiled its AI Action Plan. None of this proves an illegal quid pro quo in any courtroom sense — and that is exactly the point. The evidentiary wall built in Trump v. United States means the internal communications that would establish intent are very plausibly classified as touching official acts, and therefore untouchable. The money and the policy calendar are both public record. The connection between them is a well-evidenced allegation that no institution currently has the tools to test.

Naming the Thing

The comparative literature on democratic backsliding — Levitsky and Ziblatt, Geddes and Frantz on personalist regimes — generally assumes an executive who must fight the judiciary to get what he wants: pack it, purge it, staff it with loyalists. What distinguishes the American case, and what makes it in some ways more unsettling rather than less, is that none of that proved necessary. The Court did not need to be captured because it volunteered. Six justices, using nothing but ordinary-looking procedural rulings dressed in textualist restraint, achieved what court-packing achieves elsewhere: a judiciary that, collectively, can no longer stop the executive in real time, while the one body that retains that power holds it in reserve, exercised at its own pace, on its own docket. Add an immunity doctrine that makes the president's own team describe him internally, per Haberman and Swan's reporting, as functionally invincible — "a walking moral hazard" who has learned that "nobody cared, I'm allowed to" — and what you have is not a captured court serving an authoritarian president. You have a complicit court that built the authoritarian architecture and handed him the keys.

Diktat by Due Process: How the Supreme Court and Trump Co-Authored Electoral Autocracy

There is a particular kind of vertigo that comes from watching an institution dismantle its own capacity for resistance using the vocabulary of restraint. That is what has happened to the federal judiciary over the past eighteen months, and it is worth being precise about the mechanism, because the precision is the whole point. This was not capture in the sense the comparative-authoritarianism literature usually means it — no loyalist justices installed on packed courts, no purges of independent judges, none of the crude instruments Orbán or Kaczyński required to bend their judiciaries to heel. The United States Supreme Court needed no such instruments. It simply voted, on its own initiative, using its own procedural discretion, to narrow the collective capacity of Article III courts to check the executive — while quietly reserving to itself, and itself alone, the power to ever say no. That is not capture. That is complicity, exercised through legalism, and it deserves to be named as such.

The Architecture of Consolidation

Start with Trump v. CASA, decided in June 2025, because it is the load-bearing wall of everything that follows. The question presented was narrow and technical — do federal district courts have the equitable authority to issue "universal" injunctions binding the government nationwide, or only relief tailored to the specific plaintiffs before them? Justice Barrett, writing for a 6-3 majority, answered no, grounding her reasoning in the Judiciary Act of 1789 and in a reading of Marbury v. Madison that cited the case only to pivot away from what Marbury actually stands for: that it is "emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is." Barrett invoked Marbury's authority, then used it to shrink the very apparatus Marbury exists to protect. The effect was immediate and structural. A district judge can still find an executive order patently unconstitutional — the majority did not dispute that lower courts retain this power even where the government's position is, in the Court's own words, "patently wrong" — but that judge can no longer stop the policy for anyone except the plaintiffs who happened to sue in that particular courtroom. Everyone else must wait. And the only body left standing that can deliver a final, nationwide word is the Supreme Court itself, arriving in its own time, on its own emergency docket, when it chooses.

Layer onto this Trump v. United States, decided a year earlier in 2024, and the picture sharpens considerably. The ruling did not, technically, place the president above the law — Chief Justice Roberts was careful to preserve, on paper, the principle that unofficial acts remain prosecutable. But the evidentiary architecture the Court built around that principle renders it close to a legal fiction. Prosecutors cannot introduce evidence of a president's official acts — internal communications, staff conversations, agency directives — even to establish the motive or context behind an unofficial crime. Courts are barred from inquiring into presidential motive at all when classifying conduct as official. And core constitutional powers, including control of the Department of Justice and the pardon power, are absolutely immune, full stop, no balancing test required. Barrett herself dissented from the evidence-exclusion piece, warning it would "hamstring" any real prosecution — and Roberts's response, tucked into a footnote, essentially conceded the point: prosecutors may point to the fact that an official act occurred and to what was exchanged for it, but they may never probe why. That "why" is precisely where corrupt intent lives. Strip it out, and you have built a structure innocent people never need and guilty people cannot be caught inside.

Then, in June 2026, the same term the Court struck down birthright citizenship, it decided Mullin v. Doe, and the pattern repeated at a different register. The question was whether the statutory bar on judicial review of Temporary Protected Status terminations — "there is no judicial review of any determination of the Secretary" — covers not just substantive country-conditions calls but procedural ones too, including whether the Secretary genuinely consulted other agencies as the statute requires. The Court said yes, closing off even the narrow procedural door that TPS holders' lawyers had tried to walk through. Same doctrine as CASA, different subject matter: a statute, an emergency posture, a ruling that forecloses review rather than exercises it.

Where the Doctrine Meets Bodies

It would be a mistake to treat any of this as abstract. Marimar Martinez, a U.S. citizen and Montessori teaching assistant, was shot five times by a Border Patrol agent in Chicago's Brighton Park neighborhood in October 2025, during an operation whose official narrative — that she rammed a federal vehicle — was later contradicted by video a judge ordered released. The agent's own text messages surfaced: "I fired 5 rounds and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book, boys." The federal charges against her were dropped. In Minneapolis, Operation Metro Surge left two U.S. citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, dead within the same month, shot by federal agents in circumstances that helped trigger a partial government shutdown when Democrats refused DHS funding without body-camera and warrant reforms. In Chicago's South Shore, roughly three hundred federal agents raided an apartment building and detained children for hours, zip-tied, while Governor Pritzker's own state government could not get federal authorities to disclose where those children were being held. And beneath all of it sat the Lyons Memo — an internal ICE directive authorizing agents to force entry into homes on the strength of an administrative removal warrant, no judge required, kept so quiet that agents were reportedly told not to take notes when briefed on it.

Mahmoud Khalil's case belongs in this same frame, and its statutory vintage is worth dwelling on. Secretary Rubio invoked INA §237(a)(4)(C) — a McCarthy-era provision from the 1952 McCarran-Walter Act, built for Cold War ideological exclusion — to place Khalil, a lawful permanent resident and Columbia graduate, into removal proceedings over protected political speech. The Third Circuit did not reach the First Amendment question at all. It ruled, in January 2026, that the federal district court lacked jurisdiction to hear his constitutional claims in the first instance, routing him instead through immigration court — the exact same jurisdiction-stripping logic that runs through CASA and Mullin, applied now to a green card holder's core political rights.

And when the Court did impose a real check — blocking the unilateral domestic deployment of the National Guard for interior immigration enforcement — the administration did not defy the ruling. It found a workaround. Customs and Border Protection, under commander-at-large Gregory Bovino, simply absorbed the mission the Guard had been blocked from performing, deploying into Chicago and Minneapolis under a different statutory hat. The Court closed one door; the executive found an unlocked window three feet away, because the ruling had addressed the vehicle, not the destination.

The Corollary: What Unaccountability Produces

If you want to see what this architecture yields when nobody is watching, look at Trump's own 2025 financial disclosure — a document his administration was legally obligated to file, not an opposition dossier. It reports $2.2 billion in income, more than triple 2024's $622 million, driven overwhelmingly by roughly $1.4 billion in cryptocurrency ventures launched days before and during his second inauguration, timed against a presidency actively rewriting federal crypto regulation in those same ventures' favor. Add twenty-one thousand securities trades across sixteen hundred companies, including a cluster of tech-stock purchases made the same day the White House unveiled its AI Action Plan. None of this proves an illegal quid pro quo in any courtroom sense — and that is exactly the point. The evidentiary wall built in Trump v. United States means the internal communications that would establish intent are very plausibly classified as touching official acts, and therefore untouchable. The money and the policy calendar are both public record. The connection between them is a well-evidenced allegation that no institution currently has the tools to test.

Naming the Thing

The comparative literature on democratic backsliding — Levitsky and Ziblatt, Geddes and Frantz on personalist regimes — generally assumes an executive who must fight the judiciary to get what he wants: pack it, purge it, staff it with loyalists. What distinguishes the American case, and what makes it in some ways more unsettling rather than less, is that none of that proved necessary. The Court did not need to be captured because it volunteered. Six justices, using nothing but ordinary-looking procedural rulings dressed in textualist restraint, achieved what court-packing achieves elsewhere: a judiciary that, collectively, can no longer stop the executive in real time, while the one body that retains that power holds it in reserve, exercised at its own pace, on its own docket. Add an immunity doctrine that makes the president's own team describe him internally, per Haberman and Swan's reporting, as functionally invincible — "a walking moral hazard" who has learned that "nobody cared, I'm allowed to" — and what you have is not a captured court serving an authoritarian president. You have a complicit court that built the authoritarian architecture and handed him the keys.

Diktat by Due Process: How the Supreme Court and Trump Co-Authored Electoral Autocracy

There is a particular kind of vertigo that comes from watching an institution dismantle its own capacity for resistance using the vocabulary of restraint. That is what has happened to the federal judiciary over the past eighteen months, and it is worth being precise about the mechanism, because the precision is the whole point. This was not capture in the sense the comparative-authoritarianism literature usually means it — no loyalist justices installed on packed courts, no purges of independent judges, none of the crude instruments Orbán or Kaczyński required to bend their judiciaries to heel. The United States Supreme Court needed no such instruments. It simply voted, on its own initiative, using its own procedural discretion, to narrow the collective capacity of Article III courts to check the executive — while quietly reserving to itself, and itself alone, the power to ever say no. That is not capture. That is complicity, exercised through legalism, and it deserves to be named as such.

The Architecture of Consolidation

Start with Trump v. CASA, decided in June 2025, because it is the load-bearing wall of everything that follows. The question presented was narrow and technical — do federal district courts have the equitable authority to issue "universal" injunctions binding the government nationwide, or only relief tailored to the specific plaintiffs before them? Justice Barrett, writing for a 6-3 majority, answered no, grounding her reasoning in the Judiciary Act of 1789 and in a reading of Marbury v. Madison that cited the case only to pivot away from what Marbury actually stands for: that it is "emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is." Barrett invoked Marbury's authority, then used it to shrink the very apparatus Marbury exists to protect. The effect was immediate and structural. A district judge can still find an executive order patently unconstitutional — the majority did not dispute that lower courts retain this power even where the government's position is, in the Court's own words, "patently wrong" — but that judge can no longer stop the policy for anyone except the plaintiffs who happened to sue in that particular courtroom. Everyone else must wait. And the only body left standing that can deliver a final, nationwide word is the Supreme Court itself, arriving in its own time, on its own emergency docket, when it chooses.

Layer onto this Trump v. United States, decided a year earlier in 2024, and the picture sharpens considerably. The ruling did not, technically, place the president above the law — Chief Justice Roberts was careful to preserve, on paper, the principle that unofficial acts remain prosecutable. But the evidentiary architecture the Court built around that principle renders it close to a legal fiction. Prosecutors cannot introduce evidence of a president's official acts — internal communications, staff conversations, agency directives — even to establish the motive or context behind an unofficial crime. Courts are barred from inquiring into presidential motive at all when classifying conduct as official. And core constitutional powers, including control of the Department of Justice and the pardon power, are absolutely immune, full stop, no balancing test required. Barrett herself dissented from the evidence-exclusion piece, warning it would "hamstring" any real prosecution — and Roberts's response, tucked into a footnote, essentially conceded the point: prosecutors may point to the fact that an official act occurred and to what was exchanged for it, but they may never probe why. That "why" is precisely where corrupt intent lives. Strip it out, and you have built a structure innocent people never need and guilty people cannot be caught inside.

Then, in June 2026, the same term the Court struck down birthright citizenship, it decided Mullin v. Doe, and the pattern repeated at a different register. The question was whether the statutory bar on judicial review of Temporary Protected Status terminations — "there is no judicial review of any determination of the Secretary" — covers not just substantive country-conditions calls but procedural ones too, including whether the Secretary genuinely consulted other agencies as the statute requires. The Court said yes, closing off even the narrow procedural door that TPS holders' lawyers had tried to walk through. Same doctrine as CASA, different subject matter: a statute, an emergency posture, a ruling that forecloses review rather than exercises it.

Where the Doctrine Meets Bodies

It would be a mistake to treat any of this as abstract. Marimar Martinez, a U.S. citizen and Montessori teaching assistant, was shot five times by a Border Patrol agent in Chicago's Brighton Park neighborhood in October 2025, during an operation whose official narrative — that she rammed a federal vehicle — was later contradicted by video a judge ordered released. The agent's own text messages surfaced: "I fired 5 rounds and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book, boys." The federal charges against her were dropped. In Minneapolis, Operation Metro Surge left two U.S. citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, dead within the same month, shot by federal agents in circumstances that helped trigger a partial government shutdown when Democrats refused DHS funding without body-camera and warrant reforms. In Chicago's South Shore, roughly three hundred federal agents raided an apartment building and detained children for hours, zip-tied, while Governor Pritzker's own state government could not get federal authorities to disclose where those children were being held. And beneath all of it sat the Lyons Memo — an internal ICE directive authorizing agents to force entry into homes on the strength of an administrative removal warrant, no judge required, kept so quiet that agents were reportedly told not to take notes when briefed on it.

Mahmoud Khalil's case belongs in this same frame, and its statutory vintage is worth dwelling on. Secretary Rubio invoked INA §237(a)(4)(C) — a McCarthy-era provision from the 1952 McCarran-Walter Act, built for Cold War ideological exclusion — to place Khalil, a lawful permanent resident and Columbia graduate, into removal proceedings over protected political speech. The Third Circuit did not reach the First Amendment question at all. It ruled, in January 2026, that the federal district court lacked jurisdiction to hear his constitutional claims in the first instance, routing him instead through immigration court — the exact same jurisdiction-stripping logic that runs through CASA and Mullin, applied now to a green card holder's core political rights.

And when the Court did impose a real check — blocking the unilateral domestic deployment of the National Guard for interior immigration enforcement — the administration did not defy the ruling. It found a workaround. Customs and Border Protection, under commander-at-large Gregory Bovino, simply absorbed the mission the Guard had been blocked from performing, deploying into Chicago and Minneapolis under a different statutory hat. The Court closed one door; the executive found an unlocked window three feet away, because the ruling had addressed the vehicle, not the destination.

The Corollary: What Unaccountability Produces

If you want to see what this architecture yields when nobody is watching, look at Trump's own 2025 financial disclosure — a document his administration was legally obligated to file, not an opposition dossier. It reports $2.2 billion in income, more than triple 2024's $622 million, driven overwhelmingly by roughly $1.4 billion in cryptocurrency ventures launched days before and during his second inauguration, timed against a presidency actively rewriting federal crypto regulation in those same ventures' favor. Add twenty-one thousand securities trades across sixteen hundred companies, including a cluster of tech-stock purchases made the same day the White House unveiled its AI Action Plan. None of this proves an illegal quid pro quo in any courtroom sense — and that is exactly the point. The evidentiary wall built in Trump v. United States means the internal communications that would establish intent are very plausibly classified as touching official acts, and therefore untouchable. The money and the policy calendar are both public record. The connection between them is a well-evidenced allegation that no institution currently has the tools to test.

Naming the Thing

The comparative literature on democratic backsliding — Levitsky and Ziblatt, Geddes and Frantz on personalist regimes — generally assumes an executive who must fight the judiciary to get what he wants: pack it, purge it, staff it with loyalists. What distinguishes the American case, and what makes it in some ways more unsettling rather than less, is that none of that proved necessary. The Court did not need to be captured because it volunteered. Six justices, using nothing but ordinary-looking procedural rulings dressed in textualist restraint, achieved what court-packing achieves elsewhere: a judiciary that, collectively, can no longer stop the executive in real time, while the one body that retains that power holds it in reserve, exercised at its own pace, on its own docket. Add an immunity doctrine that makes the president's own team describe him internally, per Haberman and Swan's reporting, as functionally invincible — "a walking moral hazard" who has learned that "nobody cared, I'm allowed to" — and what you have is not a captured court serving an authoritarian president. You have a complicit court that built the authoritarian architecture and handed him the keys.

  • Bibliography

    (Organized by topic)

    Immigration Term Overview & General Coverage

    Castillo, Andrea and Ana Ceballos. "Even without birthright citizenship, Supreme Court co-signs much of Trump's immigration agenda." Los Angeles Times/Yahoo, July 6, 2026.
    "How Roberts led a fractured Supreme Court to wins for the right and defeats for Trump." Los Angeles Times, July 2, 2026.

    "On immigration, Supreme Court accedes to Trump's restrictive agenda." Reuters, June 26, 2026. "Supreme Court decisions on immigration, guns and weedkiller: 6 takeaways." USA Today, June 25, 2026.
    "How the Supreme Court became a pivotal force in Trump's immigration agenda." Washington Post, July 1, 2026.

    "U.S. Supreme Court Issues Major Rulings on Immigration, Gun Rights, and Corporate Liability." azat.tv, June 25, 2026.

    Birthright Citizenship (Trump v. Barbara)

    "Supreme Court rejects Trump's plan to limit birthright citizenship." Los Angeles Times, June 30, 2026. "Supreme Court strikes down Trump's birthright citizenship executive order in landmark decision." Constitution Center, June 29, 2026.
    "Thomas: Birthright decision 'devalues' American citizenship." The Hill, June 30, 2026.

    "On Today's Ruling on Birthright Citizenship." National Review, June 30, 2026.
    Lat, David. "4 Takeaways From The Birthright Citizenship Decision." David Lat's Substack, July 1, 2026. "Supreme Court Successfully Reads the Constitution on Birthright Citizenship." American Family Voices/AFJ, June 30, 2026.
    "Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship, rejects Trump order." Brookings, July 1, 2026. Supreme Court of the United States. Trump v. Barbara, Opinion, June 30, 2026 (supremecourt.gov).

    Temporary Protected Status (Mullin v. Doe)

    Supreme Court of the United States. Mullin v. Doe, No. 25-1083, Opinion, June 25, 2026 (supremecourt.gov).
    "Sanitized and Unreviewable: Unpacking the Supreme Court's Mullin Ruling." Just Security, June 25, 2026.
    "Mullin v. Doe: Supreme Court Allows Termination of Temporary Protected Status for Haiti and Syria." Congressional Research Service, EveryCRSReport, July 1, 2026.
    "US Supreme Court sides with Trump in TPS case." New York Post, June 25, 2026.
    "SCOTUS ruling on TPS will lead to deportation of Haitians and Syrians." USA Today, June 26, 2026. "US supreme court rules in favor of Trump administration bid to strip Haitians and Syrians of protected status." The Guardian, June 25, 2026.

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    "How will the US supreme court's ruling on TPS affect 1.3 million immigrants?" The Guardian, July 7, 2026.
    "Case Preview: Mullin v. Doe | Judicial Check or Unreviewable Executive Power?" YouTube legal analysis, April 23, 2026.

    "With temporary protections for some Afghans set to expire, appeals court steps in." NPR, July 15, 2025.
    "US appeals court allows Trump administration to remove deportation protections for Afghans, Cameroonians." Reuters, July 21, 2025.

    "Afghans Watch as Supreme Court Weighs TPS Protections for Haitians, Syrians." American Community Media, June 8, 2026.

    Asylum Metering Ruling

    "Supreme Court says U.S. can turn away asylum seekers at the border." NPR, June 25, 2026. Supreme Court of the United States. Mullin v. Al Otro Lado, No. 25-5, Opinion, June 25, 2026.
    "US Supreme Court Sides With Trump in Asylum-Processing Case." U.S. News & World Report, June 25, 2026.

    Trump v. CASA / Universal Injunctions

    Supreme Court of the United States. Trump v. CASA, Inc., No. 24A884, Opinion, June 27, 2025 (supremecourt.gov).
    "Analyzing the Supreme Court's Dangerous Decision in Trump v. CASA." National Immigration Law Center, June 27, 2025.

    "Supreme Court's Trump v. Casa, Inc. ruling limits use of nationwide injunctions." National Association of Counties, June 27, 2025.
    "Nationwide Injunctions After CASA." Stanford Law School, December 11, 2025.
    "Trump v. CASA and Constitutional Hardball." Public Discourse, August 17, 2025.

    "Trump v. CASA." Emory Lawyer, Winter 2026.
    Trump v. CASA. Wikipedia (overview and procedural history).

    Presidential Immunity (Trump v. United States, 2024)

    Supreme Court of the United States. Trump v. United States, No. 23-939, Opinion, July 1, 2024 (supremecourt.gov).
    Trump v. United States. Oyez, Cornell Legal Information Institute.
    "What Exactly Did Justice Barrett Agree With Chief Justice Roberts On About Presidential Immunity?" Reason/Volokh Conspiracy, July 4, 2024.

    "Trump v. United States: Explaining the Outrage." Brookings, July 16, 2024.
    "Trump v. United States and the Ethics of Presidential Immunity." Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, Santa Clara University.
    "Trump v. United States: Revisiting the Presidential Immunity Ruling 1 Year Later." Center for American Progress, July 30, 2025.
    "Supreme Court Update: Trump v. United States (No. 23-939)." Wiggin and Dana LLP.
    "A Prudential Way Forward in Trump v. United States." Just Security, April 28, 2025.

    "Supreme court rules Trump has 'absolute immunity' for official acts." The Guardian, July 1, 2024.

    Mahmoud Khalil / Green Card Jurisdiction-Stripping

    "Appeals Court in Mahmoud Khalil's Case Decides Federal Court Lacks Jurisdiction Until Immigration Proceedings Conclude." ACLU, January 14, 2026.
    "Trump administration wins appeal of ruling releasing pro-Palestinian activist Khalil." Reuters, January 15, 2026.

    U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, Opinion, January 14, 2026 (ca3.uscourts.gov).
    "Appeals court stay will prevent Mahmoud Khalil's removal while he seeks SCOTUS review." Good Morning America/ABC, May 25, 2026.
    "Mahmoud Khalil Appeals Retaliatory Ruling in Immigration Case." ACLU, March 2, 2026.
    "Law from the 1950s may play role in Columbia University deportation case." Constitution Center, March 11, 2025.
    "What is the immigration law being cited in Mahmoud Khalil's federal deportation case?" The Hill, March 12, 2025.
    Department of Homeland Security, Notice to Appear re: Mahmoud Khalil, March 9, 2025 (via Cato Institute).

    Street-Level Enforcement: Shootings and Use of Force

    "Marimar Martinez describes being shot 5 times by CBP agent." PBS NewsHour, February 2, 2026. "Chicago woman shot by Border Patrol in Brighton Park to file lawsuit." ABC7 Chicago, February 10, 2026.
    "Judge Allows Release of Evidence From Border Patrol Shooting." New York Times, February 6, 2026. "Federal prosecutors move to dismiss charges against Chicago woman shot by Border Patrol." NBC News, November 20, 2025.

    "Border Patrol agent who shot Chicago woman Marimar Martinez placed on leave." Video news report, February 11, 2026.
    Shooting of Marimar Martinez. Wikipedia.
    "'A Manufactured Crisis': Minnesota Communities Terrorized by the Federal Government." Human Rights Watch, June 18, 2026.

    "Lawyers of Chicago woman shot by federal agents say documents show how DHS lies about investigations." PBS News, February 12, 2026.

    South Shore Apartment Raid & Lyons Memo

    "Gov. Pritzker Orders State Agencies [to] Probe Treatment [of] Kids Detained [by] Feds During South Shore [Raid]." WTTW News, October 3, 2025.
    "ICE Raid, Pritzker, Trump." Time, 2025.
    "Judiciary and Homeland Security Committees Launch Investigation Into Violent Chicago Immigration Raid." U.S. House Judiciary Committee Democrats, press release.

    Governor Pritzker Newsroom. "Governor Pritzker Directs State Agencies to Evaluate Treatment of Children During Federal Raid in South Shore." Press release.
    "DHS's Home Entry Memo Violates the Constitutional Rights of Americans." Protect Democracy, 2026.

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    "Lawsuit Puts Illinois on Offensive Against Menacing Immigration Raids." Capitol News Illinois, 2026. "ICE Authorizes Forceful Entries to Residences Based on Administrative Warrants Alone." Immigration Policy Tracking Project (Stanford Law).

    Gregory Bovino / CBP National Guard Workaround

    "What was Gregory Bovino doing at a 'remigration' conference?" NPR, June 5, 2026.
    "Greg Bovino Was the Star at a European Remigration Summit." WIRED, June 3, 2026.
    "AfD, Vox mingle with ex-US Border Patrol chief, white nationalists." Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention, May 31, 2026.
    Gregory Bovino. Wikipedia.

    Surveillance: Palantir ELITE and Protester Watchlists

    "USA: Palantir's surveillance tech allegedly fuels 'indiscriminate' and violent ICE operations." Business & Human Rights Resource Centre, 2026.
    "Report: ICE Using Palantir Tool [That] Feeds [on] Medicaid Data." Electronic Frontier Foundation, January 2026.

    "Correcting the Record: Response to the EFF January 15, 2026 Report on Palantir." Palantir Technologies blog, 2026.
    "In Maine immigration raids, fears of a 'domestic terrorist' list." Boston Globe, January 28, 2026.
    "ICE denies having a protester database. But a letter to Congress sheds more light." Office of Rep. Maxwell Frost, June 10, 2026.
    "ICE memo tells agents to respect protesters' rights following watchlist threats." Politico Pro, March 11, 2026.
    "ICE has spun a massive surveillance web. We talked to activists and journalists." NPR, March 4, 2026. "ICE, DHS domestic terror protest biometric database civil rights." Mother Jones, May 2026.

    Regime Change (Haberman & Swan) and Presidential Conduct

    Haberman, Maggie and Jonathan Swan. Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump. 2026.
    "New book reveals how Trump compared himself to Mao, Stalin, Attila the Hun." CNN, June 18, 2026. "Trump to the authors of 'Regime Change': 'Fake News.'" Salon, June 27, 2026.

    "Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan Say Reporting Explosive New Trump Book 'Almost Killed Us.'" New York Magazine, June 26, 2026.
    Vanity Fair interview with Haberman and Swan on Regime Change, June 23, 2026.
    "'Regime Change' Review: The Not-So-Imperial Presidency." Wall Street Journal, June 26, 2026. Haberman and Swan interview. PBS NewsHour, July 2, 2026.

    Trump Financial Disclosure & Monetization (2025)

    "Trump Pulled In at Least $2 Billion After Returning to the White House." New York Times, June 30, 2026.

    • •

    • •

    • • •

    "Trump raked in more than $1bn from crypto businesses in 2025, filing shows." The Guardian, June 30, 2026.
    "Real estate, watches and guitars: Trump's 2025 $2.2B income." ABC News, July 1, 2026.
    "Trump says outside funds 'run my money' after disclosure shows billions in 2025 revenue." CNBC, July 1, 2026.

    "Trump's income topped $2 billion in 2025, boosted by crypto, coin ventures." Washington Post, June 30, 2026.
    "Trump cashes in on crypto as the economy flounders. Perfect." USA Today, July 5, 2026.
    "As Trump reports $2.2 billion in 2025 income, ethics experts raise alarms." Yahoo Finance, July 1, 2026.

    "Trump's financial disclosure reveals USD 1.2 billion in crypto-related earnings in 2025." Tribune India, June 30, 2026.
    "Trump's 2025 financial disclosure shows his crypto-related business profits exceed $1.4 billion." Bloomberg, via ChainCatcher, June 30, 2026.

    "Trump discloses 21,000 securities trades during first year in office." ABC News, July 2, 2026. "What to know about Trump's financial disclosure." The Hill, July 1, 2026.
    U.S. Office of Government Ethics. Trump 2025 Public Financial Disclosure Report (927 pages), released June 30, 2026.

    A formatting note: several of these (SCOTUS opinions, the OGE disclosure, the Third Circuit opinion) are primary legal/government documents and could be styled differently in a final reference list (e.g., Bluebook citation) than the journalism entries.



 

 

 

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Break the Cycle (rough draft)

 

Break the Cycle

He was thirty-seven, engaged, and allegedly fine.

“Allegedly” because, over wine one night, Mara leaned across the table and said, not unkindly, “I love you, but you’re not… here. You’re a million miles away half the time.”

“I’m right here,” he’d protested, tapping the table.

She shook her head. “Physically, sure. Emotionally? Radio silence. I think you need to become more self-aware. More present. Maybe talk to someone.”

He laughed it off. Then spent three nights awake, feeling something that might have been dread or indigestion, and finally bought a copy of Psychology Today at the corner bodega like a man buying contraband.

The ad almost found him on its own.

SHORT-TERM THERAPY / PSYCHOEDUCATION
Learn to identify, articulate, and own your feelings in precision work including:
affect labeling, guided imagery, controlled exposure to internal states.
Overcome emotional avoidance. Gain clarity. Break the cycle.

He stared at the phrase precision work until the letters blurred.
Short-term. Psychoeducation. Break the cycle.

Mara wanted him more self-aware. This—he told himself—was him trying.

He circled the ad twice.


Protocol 1: The Rock

The office was smaller than he expected. No couch, just two chairs, a plant that looked surprisingly alive, and a framed print of a mountain range that might have been Switzerland or stock photography.

She was already seated when he arrived. Mid-40s, calm eyes, a mild smile.

“Short-term therapy,” she said, after he’d stumbled through his reasons. “Psychoeducation. Precision work around feelings. That’s what you’re hoping for?”

“Yeah. I feel stuck,” he said. “Mara says I’m distant.”

“Stuck,” she repeated. “Close, but I’d call that avoidance. Let’s see if we can stay with what’s underneath. I’d like to try a guided imagery exercise with you. Okay?”

He nodded, because that seemed like the correct behavior.

She asked him to close his eyes and picture himself at the base of a hill.

“There is a rock,” she said. “About the size of a backpack. Heavy, but liftable. You pick it up and carry it up the hill to me. I’m waiting at the top.”

He could see it: the rock, the hill, her silhouette at the crest.
His arms tensed around nothing.

“Walk,” she said softly. “Bring the weight to me. Don’t drop it, don’t rush it. Stay with the feeling in your body. That’s unprocessed affect.”

He imagined trudging. In his mind, it took a few minutes, maybe less.

“Good,” she murmured. “You made it. Now I’m rolling the rock back down. Watch it. There it goes.”

He watched. In the image, the rock clattered away from him, sounding heavier than it had felt to carry.

“Now you go down and get it. Let’s try again. This time, the rock is a little heavier. Notice that.”

The second climb took longer. His shoulders hurt, though they were resting on the arms of a chair in a small office.

“Good,” she said again, same tone. “I’m rolling it down.”

By the third, the rock had doubled in size and his imaginings had begun to lag. Time stretched, each step separate, deliberate.

“Stay with it,” she said. “You’re learning to tolerate difficult, unnamed emotion. Patience with what you’ve always dropped.”

He felt his jaw clench.

On the fifth repetition, the hill extended. She didn’t say how, exactly. She just noted, “The distance is a little longer this time. You’ve carried this feeling for years. See if you can stay with the weight.”

He tried to tell himself it was an exercise. His legs felt tight anyway.

“How far is it?” he asked, eyes still closed.

“Longer than before,” she said. “That’s what matters. Don’t distract yourself. Just carry.”

By the seventh climb the hill had become, without comment, a road. Then a coast. Then, when she next spoke, “You’ve been carrying this for miles. Decades. This is your interior life. Notice how impossible it feels, and keep going.”

His body responded like someone who’d actually been walking: a subtle tremor in his calves, a twitch in his fingers, a hollow ache in his chest.

“Good,” she said, as he imagined arriving at some unseen summit. “You stayed with it. That’s progress.”

He opened his eyes, drained, surprised to find himself still in a static chair.

“How long was that?” he asked, throat dry.

She glanced at the clock. “Forty minutes.”

He stared. Forty minutes, and in his chest, it felt like years.

“Short-term work,” she assured him. “You’re learning patience with your internal weight. Next time, we may increase the distance a little.”

As he left, his stride felt off by half a second, like he was walking with something heavier than his own body.


Protocol 2: Almost

The second session was scheduled two weeks later. He felt oddly relieved when her text confirmed the date—like a rock briefly set down.

“I want to look at how you handle not getting your way,” she said, once they’d settled in. “Life’s disappointments, blocked gratification. Sound relevant?”

He thought of half-finished conversations with Mara, jobs he hadn’t applied for, the way he avoided certain phone calls.

“Yeah,” he said. “I guess.”

She smiled. “We’ll do a simple exercise. I’ll bring you to the brink of something wanted, then stop. Your task is to notice the frustration and stay with it without scrambling to fix it. Ready?”

He swallowed. “Okay.”

They built it slowly. That first week, the thing “wanted” was vague—a sense of relief at finishing a difficult story he was telling about his childhood. She guided him there with questions, then glanced at the clock and said, “We’ll have to stop there. Let’s leave it as is.”

He walked out, unsettled but tentatively proud: he had not demanded an answer, not begged for more time.

The second time, the spacing shifted. Three weeks. She texted, last minute, to confirm.

“I’d like you to picture something closer,” she said in that session. “Something you really want that feels almost in reach. Maybe Mara. Maybe the feeling of being understood. Hold it right at the edge.”

He chose, quietly, the image of Mara’s face when she smiled like he’d done something right. He brought it close enough to almost touch.

“That’s it,” she said. “Stay with that edge. Notice the urge to grab it. Don’t move.”

His chest tightened. The urge was almost physical.

“Okay,” she said suddenly, glancing at the clock. “We’ll stop here for today. You did well with your frustrated desire.”

He sat there, every muscle expecting an extension, time spilling forward where she saw a boundary.

“That’s… it?” he asked.

“For now,” she said. “Between now and next time, just notice when you’re almost getting what you want and don’t. Be curious. Let yourself hang there a little.”

The next time was five weeks out.

In between, he found himself catching that moment constantly: hand reaching for Mara, her phone ringing to drag her away; a project nearly finished when his boss shifted priorities; a friend half-promising to meet and never texting back. Each moment stopped at the brink, and instead of moving on, he lingered there, as instructed.

The third session built the edge sharper. She had him imagine her promising a crucial piece of feedback, some final “insight” about who he was and why he sabotaged things.

“You’re right there,” she said. “You can almost hear it. Feel that?”

He nodded, fists tight.

“Good,” she said. “Let’s end here.”

He stared at her.

“I thought—”

“You tolerated that beautifully,” she said. “You didn’t demand closure. That’s acceptance work.”

His heart kept waiting anyway.

At the end of the session, she didn’t offer a date.

“I’ll text or call about next time,” she said, straightening the papers on her lap. “I want to space it out a bit more. Let you sit with the not-knowing.”

He nodded, trying to look therapeutic, not desperate.

He spent that evening refreshing his messages, then the next day, then three weeks. Each notification triggered the same physiological spike—expectation with no object.

Her call never came.

Some nights, lying beside Mara, his body felt tuned to a frequency of almost: almost asleep, almost comforted, almost reassured. Always waiting for something slightly out of reach.

When Mara asked what was wrong, he said, “I think I’m learning to accept not getting my way.”

She looked at him like he was describing a car accident as “road practice.”


Protocol 3: Name and Tame

When, after two months of silence, he finally messaged to ask whether they were still working together, she responded with a brief: Yes. We’ll do one more round. Come in next Thursday at 3.

He arrived with his jaw already aching.

“This one is about clarity,” she said. “Naming what you feel with precision. You said you feel ‘stuck.’ Let’s refine that.”

He sat forward. “I feel stuck,” he repeated.

She tilted her head. “Close, but not quite palpable. I’m hearing avoidance. Why are you stuck?”

He frowned. “I’m not sure. I just feel—”

“Mmm. I’m hearing anger behind that,” she said. “Can you feel it? Try saying, ‘I feel angry.’”

He hesitated, then tried it on. “I feel angry.”

“How is that different from ‘stuck’?” she asked gently.

“It’s… sharper,” he admitted. “More… real.”

“Good,” she said. “Let’s keep going.”

Over the next forty minutes, she adjusted the words by degrees, always in the same pattern: his vague term, her refinement, his reluctant adoption, his gradual conviction.

“I feel sad.”
“Sad is broad. I’m hearing heartache. Try that.”

“I feel heartache,” he said, and felt something twist in his chest to fit the word.

“I feel frustrated.”
“Frustrated is surface-level. I’m hearing futility. It’s like carrying that rock for miles and realizing the hill never ends.”

He swallowed. “I feel futility.”

It went on.

“I feel dependent on Mara.”
“Dependent is soft. I’m hearing dependant, as in someone you’re holding up emotionally. Say, ‘I feel like a dependant.’”

He didn’t notice the typo in the word. He noticed the flood behind it.

“I feel jealous.”
“Jealousy is part of it, but I’m hearing resentment. You resent her for asking you to change.”

He repeated it, slow: “I resent her.”

Each substitution landed like a stamp; his body adjusted to match.

“Notice what happens,” she said, watching him. “When you use the precise word.”

“I feel… more real,” he said. “Like I see what I’ve always been, instead of pretending.”

“Exactly,” she said. “You’re breaking the cycle of vague avoidance.”

The session ended without ceremony. No summary, no “this is what we’ve done.” Just the quiet closing of her notebook and the soft reminder that she would “be in touch about next steps.”

On the way home, he rehearsed his new vocabulary silently, like conjugations in a foreign language.

Heartache. Futility. Resentment. Dependant. Jealousy. Forsaken.

By the time he reached his building, his shoulders were twitching with a phantom weight and his thoughts had the smooth, confident tone of a brochure delivered door to door.


The Breakup

Mara waited until he was sitting.
He was already half-turned toward the door, as if bracing for a load that wasn’t there.

“You don’t seem like yourself lately,” she said.

“That’s inaccurate,” he replied. “I’m accessing previously avoided resentment.”

She blinked.

His copy of Psychology Today lay open on the coffee table, an ad circled twice, the page worn at the edges from being touched.

“I mean you’re… tense,” she said. “Always waiting for something.”

“That’s expectation work,” he said. “I’m practicing staying with wanting and not getting.”

“You stare at your phone all night.”

“That’s part of the protocol. I’m learning to inhabit the build-up without relief.”

She laughed once, dryly, then stopped when he didn’t.

“I just wanted you to be more present,” she said. “More honest about your feelings.”

“I am,” he said earnestly. “I can identify heartache, futility, jealousy, and dependent longing with much more clarity now.”

She stared at him.

“You sound like a deranged brochure,” she said.

“It’s called psychoeducation,” he says gently.

She looked at his hands. His fingers twitched, pinching some invisible edge, like he was still balancing the rock.

“When I touch you, you flinch,” she said.

“That’s just the body remembering the exercise,” he replied. “It means it worked.”

“No,” she said softly. “It means you’re miserable.”

“Miserable is too vague,” he said. “It’s more like… sustained futility with spikes of jealousy.”

He sounded faintly proud, like he’d finally gotten the answer right on a test.

“This was supposed to help us,” she said.

“It did,” he answered. “I can see now that you’re central to my resentment pattern.”

“Jesus.”

“That’s not a blame statement,” he added quickly. “It’s descriptive.”

She wrapped her arms around herself.

“I don’t want to be your ‘pattern,’” she said. “I wanted to be your partner.”

“Partners co-create avoidance,” he said. “The modality helped me see that.”

“So what does that mean… for us?” she asked.

“It means you’re stepping out of the role,” he said.

She squinted at him.

“I’m breaking up with you,” she said.

“Yeah,” he said after a beat. “That fits.”

“Is that all you have to say?” she asked.

“I wish you well,” he said. He paused. “From a distance.”

She swallowed.

“Do you even care that I’m leaving?” she asked.

“Care is fuzzy,” he said. “I feel a mix of heartache and clarified resentment.”

She picked up her bag. He watched the movement with the distant attention of someone observing a test run.

“You don’t seem sad,” she said.

“Sadness is pre-treatment language,” he said.

She moved to the door, then paused.

“You said you wanted something short-term,” she said. “Remember?”

“Yes. ‘Brief psychoeducational protocol,’” he said.

“It wasn’t,” she said.

“It still isn’t,” he replied. “I’m waiting for her to schedule the next session.”

“She’s not calling,” Mara said.

“That’s part of the work,” he said.

“No,” she said. “That’s just… abandonment.”

“Exactly,” he said, and gave a small, strained smile, like he was proud of naming it correctly.

“I hope someday you get yourself back,” she said quietly.

“I think this is who I am now,” he said.

She stepped into the hall.

His hand was already reaching for his phone, checking for a notification that wasn’t there, jaw ticking with the tiny, invisible movement of someone readjusting a load on his shoulders.


Break the Cycle

Weeks later, alone now, he sat in a coffee shop with a half-eaten sandwich and a jitter in his leg that wouldn’t leave.

He’d stopped expecting the therapist’s call, or told himself he had. Still, every vibration from his phone sent a small flash through his chest—anticipation without object.

There was a newspaper by the sugar packets. Someone had left it folded open.

He reached for it, more to occupy his hands than his mind, and his eyes slid down the page.

SHORT-TERM THERAPY / EMOTIONAL PRECISION WORK
Learn to identify, articulate, and own your feelings in precision exercises:
affect labeling, guided imagery, controlled exposure to internal states.
Overcome emotional avoidance. Gain clarity. Break the cycle.

He frowned.

The wording sparked something under his skin, like static. Affect labeling, guided imagery, controlled exposure. Precision exercises. Overcome avoidance. Gain clarity.

His jaw twitched.

The name under the ad was not hers. Different therapist. Different address.
Same font. Same order. Same promise.

Same typo in the word dependant—sitting there like a small, familiar scar.

He stared a moment longer than normal, then told himself he was being dramatic. Practices probably shared language. Modality, whatever. That was just how the field worked now. Protocols, manuals, standardized scripts.

His pencil hovered over the page.

He felt a heaviness in his arms, like he’d picked something up again.

Slowly, almost gently, he circled the ad.

“Clarity,” he murmured, as his finger traced the words like a mantra. “Control. Clarity. Control.”

Outside, the city moved on: people carrying visible bags and invisible weights up hills no one had named.

The ad’s tagline, in small print, sat just beneath the therapist’s credentials:

Break the cycle.

He stared at it, feeling something tighten and then smooth out inside his chest.

Then he folded the paper, slipped it into his bag, and finished his sandwich, already planning his next short-term work.