What the Venezuelans Deported to El Salvador Experienced - #ThisIsWhatIVotedFor

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On the night of Saturday, March 15, three planes touched down in El Salvador, carrying 261 men deported from the United States. A few dozen were Salvadoran, but most of the men were Venezuelans the Trump Administration had designated as gang members and deported, with little or no due process. I was there to document their arrival.

For more than a year, I have been embedded throughout El Salvador’s society, working on a book chronicling the country’s transformation. From the huts of remote island fishermen to the desk of the President, from elite homicide detective units to elementary school classrooms, I have interviewed government officials and everyday people, collecting stories that would shock Stephen King. I’ve stood in classrooms full of happy students which not long ago were empty, because children here once learned early that schools were places to be raped or recruited. I’ve interviewed killers in prison and sat with them face-to-face.

As I stood on the tarmac, an agent with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's ICE Special Response Team told me that some of the Venezuelans had weakly attempted to take over their plane upon landing. It wasn’t unusual for detainees to try to make a last stand, the agent said, guarding the doorway to the plane at the top of the gangway stairs. “They began to try to organize to overthrow the plane by screaming for everyone to stand up and fight. But not everyone was on board,” the agent said, cautioning me to be careful because some of the Venezuelans would fight once they were offloaded.

Even if not fighting, almost all the detainees came to the door of the plane with angry, defiant faces. It was their faces that grabbed me, because within a few hours those faces would completely transform.

The Venezuelans emerging from their plane were not in prison clothes, but in designer jeans and branded tracksuits. Their faces were the faces of guys who in no way expected what they first saw—an ocean of soldiers and police, an entire army assembled to apprehend them.

One of the alleged organizers of the attempted overthrow fought the U.S. agents on the plane, cursing the Americans, the Salvadorans, President Nayib Bukele himself. El Salvador’s Minister of Defense, René Merino, who had been standing on the tarmac at the bottom of the gangway, rushed aboard, dragged the guy to the gangway himself, and flung him into the waiting hands of black-masked guards.

The transfer from the plane to the buses that would carry them to prison was rapid, yet it might as well have been the crossing of an ancient continent. I felt the detainees’ fear as they marched through a gauntlet of black-clad guards, guns raised like the spears of some terrible tribe. I walked the line of buses waiting to depart, photographing faces. A guard noticed one of the detainees turned toward the window and wrenched his head back down into his chest.

Around 2 a.m., the convoy of 22 buses, flanked by armored vehicles and police, moved out of the airport. Soldiers and police lined the 25-mile route to the prison, with thick patrols at every bridge and intersection. For the few Salvadorans, it was a familiar landscape. But for a Venezuelan plucked from America, it must have appeared dystopian—police and soldiers for miles and miles in woodland darkness.

The Terrorism Confinement Center, a notorious maximum-security prison known as CECOT, sits in an old farm field at the foot of an ancient volcano, brightly lit against the night sky. I’ve spent considerable time there and know the place intimately. As we entered the intake yard, the head of prisons was giving orders to an assembly of hundreds of guards. He told them the Venezuelans had tried to overthrow their plane, so the guards must be extremely vigilant. He told them plainly: Show them they are not in control.

The intake began with slaps. One young man sobbed when a guard pushed him to the floor. He said, “I’m not a gang member. I’m gay. I’m a barber.” I believed him. But maybe it’s only because he didn’t look like what I had expected—he wasn’t a tattooed monster.

The men were pulled from the buses so fast the guards couldn’t keep pace. Chained at their ankles and wrists, they stumbled and fell, some guards falling to the ground with them. With each fall came a kick, a slap, a shove. The guards grabbed necks and pushed bodies into the sides of the buses as they forced the detainees forward. There was no blood, but the violence had rhythm, like a theater of fear.

Inside the intake room, a sea of trustees descended on the men with electric shavers, stripping heads of hair with haste. The guy who claimed to be a barber began to whimper, folding his hands in prayer as his hair fell. He was slapped. The man asked for his mother, then buried his face in his chained hands and cried as he was slapped again.

After being shaved, the detainees were stripped naked. More of them began to whimper; the hard faces I saw on the plane had evaporated. It was like looking at men who passed through a time machine. In two hours, they aged 10 years. Their nice clothes were not gathered or catalogued but simply thrust into black garbage bags to be thrown out with their hair.

They entered their cold cells, 80 men per cell, with steel planks for bunks, no mats, no sheets, no pillow. No television. No books. No talking. No phone calls and no visitors. For these Venezuelans, it was not just a prison they had arrived at. It was exile to another world, a place so cold and far from home they may as well have been sent into space, nameless and forgotten. Holding my camera, it was as if I watched them become ghosts.
 
I gotta say that if American prison isn't a deterrent, that shit looks like a deterrent.

"Let me tell you how after five years I was running the whole cell block."

LOLNO

"Let me tell you about the time I had to shit real bad and I told the guy on the toilet to hurry that shit up and I got thrown in seg for two weeks for talking."
 
There's also an outside chance our own citizens wouldn't be so flippant to claim every stubbed toe and every budget that doesn't allocate your favorite causes a trillion dollars is a Constitutional crisis and an abridgement of their human rights when they get a chance to see what actual IDGAF on a national level looks like..... if you keep insisting you have rights you don't, and there have been gross violations when there hasn't?

No one is gonna care when the wolf is real....... they might even unleash it themselves just so you get a taste of what you've been baiting us with.
 
You really expect to the government to be competent enough to determine if the people bring sent back really are gang members, or even "illegals?"
When Trump deports an innocent legal citizen to an El Salvadorian gulag, what will the excuse be?
Yes, I expect the government to be able to check ID and legal status.

And on the rare chance a legal citizen is sent, it would be a spic retard criminal, which I am ok with them going anyways regardless of legal status. Bonus points if they take the whole family. Enjoy El Salvador, Pedro. Hope that assault and theft charge was worth it.
 
You really expect to the government to be competent enough to determine if the people bring sent back really are gang members, or even "illegals?"
When Trump deports an innocent legal citizen to an El Salvadorian gulag, what will the excuse be?
Lynching sounds much better. We need to end the state monopoly on violence and allow the free formation of posses.
 
For more than a year, I have been embedded throughout El Salvador’s society, working on a book
I’ve stood in classrooms full of happy students which not long ago were empty, because children here once learned early that schools were places to be raped or recruited.
Hope you have an editor, because your writing is tragic...

I can't believe Time published this dreck.
 
You really expect to the government to be competent enough to determine if the people bring sent back really are gang members, or even "illegals?"
When Trump deports an innocent legal citizen to an El Salvadorian gulag, what will the excuse be?
Its going to happen, no excuses need to be made other then "tough luck" for the victim. This shit needed to happen for years and its fucking about time.
 
Guess they just don't have the funds for a color camera.

No one is gonna care when the wolf is real....... they might even unleash it themselves just so you get a taste of what you've been baiting us with.
You have no idea how true this is.
 
You really expect to the government to be competent enough to determine if the people bring sent back really are gang members, or even "illegals?"
When Trump deports an innocent legal citizen to an El Salvadorian gulag, what will the excuse be?
After a generation of using this rhetoric to defend allowing murderers, rapists, drug dealers and terrorists to not only do whatever the fuck they want, but also to demand they receive taxpayer subsidy for their effort, the answer is “I don’t give a fuck anymore. In fact can we please just bury them all in a mass grave?”. Anything Trump does to these barbarians is too good for them.
 
Hello based department.

I don't care if it's unconstitutional. We need a permanent piston treaty with El Salvador. Pay them for like a dozen more of these brutalist supermaxes and stack it full of illegal mud people and niggers.

These dudes know how to deal with crime.
This is the kind of outsourcing I can get behind.
 
Good, every time I think of them I think of that daycare from the other week where a couple of those kids died from fent exposure because of the retard immigrant couple running it. People like these prisoners took everything the kids could have ever had or been, so these gangbangers deserve to rot in a concrete oubliette.
Do you have a link to this story? I want to be mad. Was it the spics in NYC or the chink from Florida, or a third story where children die from fent exposure in a nursery?
 
You really expect to the government to be competent enough to determine if the people bring sent back really are gang members, or even "illegals?"
When Trump deports an innocent legal citizen to an El Salvadorian gulag, what will the excuse be?
Collateral damage. They should be able to get them back if they have proof of legal status. Will it happen? It may well, and there will be legal avenues to persue if it does.
But there’s a point where the rot is so deep you have to start cutting things away.
 
I read that El Salvador was paid 6 million USD for the imprisonment of this group of almost 300. That's a fucking steal. It would cost 10 times that much to have them in a max security prison in the US.

We don't have to keep paying for their lawyers and legal appeals now, either, which we would if they were still in the US. They're either El Salvador or Venezuela's problem now.
But I keep seeing a lot of people accusing him of being a dictator.
Not in El Salvador. Bukele is one of the most popular elected leaders in the entire world. His approval rating is somewhere around 85 to 90 percent depending on the study.
 
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