Friday, May 9, 2025

Stephen "Goebels" Miller wants to suspend more constitutional rights


The Greek Courier

The authoritarian watchdog of the Trumpian White House and POTUS's top policy adviser, Stephen Miller, is considering the suspension of habeas corpus, the constitutional provision that protects from unlawful detainment, as he tries to ramp up deportations of undocumented immigrants.

In a move that marks another escalation in the Trump administration's fight again the judicial branch, Miller, who thinks, acts, and looks like Hitler's propaganda minister Joseph Goebels, told reporters that "the Constitution is clear," and that "the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus can be suspended in a time of invasion."

He also added that it's an option he is actively considering, and a lot of it depends on whether the courts do the right thing or not.

According to Miller, habeas corpus can be suspended "when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it." 

Apparently, Miller is saying that an invasion of immigrants is taking place in the US; yet what is really happening is a Rebellion from rogue anti-Democracy advocates and oligarchs, such as himself, who threaten the very existence of the United States as we know it.

Miller is citing the termination of temporary protected status for some immigrants, alleging the courts violated laws passed by Congress by stepping in where they had no jurisdiction.

"The courts aren't just at war with the executive branch. The courts are at war, these radical rogue judges, with the legislative branch as well," Miller said. "All of that will inform the choice that the president ultimately makes."

Miller is echoing Donald Trump's desire to frame undocumented immigration as an "invasion" of the U.S. in many of his executive orders, invoking sweeping wartime powers to speed up immigrants' removals, often with little or no due process.

Trump has often railed against judges who have blocked many of his measures, leading to threats to impeach them, while the administration has at times defied court orders, including when it failed to turn back deportation flights of alleged Venezuelan gang members a judge ordered returned.

Though the U.S. Supreme Court ordered the administration to "facilitate" the return of the wrongly deported Kilmar Armando Ábrego García, Trump has argued that its decision doesn't mean his government has to take any active measures to bring him home.

Nonetheless, a federal judge threatened to hold the administration in contempt of court for failing to abide by the Supreme Court ruling.

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