this post was submitted on 13 Mar 2025
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Summary

Jasmine Mooney, a 35-year-old Canadian woman, has been detained in U.S. immigration facilities since March 3 after attempting to enter with an incomplete Trade NAFTA work visa application.

She was initially held at San Ysidro border crossing before being transferred in chains to detention centers in San Diego and Arizona.

Her mother, Alexis Eagles, reports inhumane conditions including overcrowded concrete cells with constant lighting and inadequate facilities.

Business partner BJ McCaslin called the situation a "nightmare" while Global Affairs Canada confirmed they're aware but unable to intervene in U.S. immigration matters.

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[–] fossilesque@mander.xyz 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

Re: Retorts to this in this thread-

But there is a peculiar behavior among most Caucasians. As soon as I become critical of Europe and its impact on other cultures, they become defensive. They begin to defend themselves. But I am not attacking them personally; I’m attacking Europe. In personalizing my observations on Europe they are personalizing European culture, identifying themselves with it. By defending themselves in this context, they are ultimately defending the death culture. This is a confusion which must be overcome, and it must be overcome in a hurry. None of us has energy to waste in such false struggles.

Caucasians have a more positive vision to offer humanity than European culture. I believe this. But in order to attain this vision it is necessary for Caucasians to step outside European culture — alongside the rest of humanity — to see Europe for what it is and what it does.

note: "Europe" here refers to imported European culture in America

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

note: “Europe” here refers to imported European culture in America

Yeah I was already wondering it's not like actual Europeans get defensive about our influence. There's nothing European about WASP(ish) culture, they're about as European as chuds with Greek statute avatars are Greek: It's a fetish, a signifier to dangle around in front of one set of people to consider themselves superior, and then hide when they're facing the Old Continent proper, then it's "Europoor", "we pay for your healthcare", whatnot. It's a culture which refuses to recognise itself, and thus is forced to define itself in opposition to others, for doing otherwise would imply acknowledging that the cultural highlight of the year, what everyone is talking about for days and weeks on end, what unifies them as a people, are the ads during superbowl. When pressed, then, you point their mind, deliberately or not, to address the question "are you actually European", and of course they'll get defensive you're attacking the charade surrounding the core of their identity. If I were pressed to describe that kind of culture in a single sentence I would choose a single word: Alienation.

[–] fossilesque@mander.xyz 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

I highly reccomend this series if you want to know how this came to be in recent centuries:

https://hellonearth.chapotraphouse.com/views/podcast/

I do not listen to these folks regularly, but they did a great job of this. It is a modernised retelling of a famous book from the early 1900s.

[–] barsoap@lemm.ee 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Yeah that was the time where maliciously maligning creeds was made a criminal offence, to stop Lutheran and Catholic preachers alike from inciting people, and religious freedom codified. Fast forward 400 years and Americans are telling us that we're limiting free speech with that kind of thing while basing their identity on the theocracies of New England which they founded because England wouldn't let them oppress people at home.

We did not send our best, and it hasn't gone uphill since. The US slept through the whole Age of Enlightenment. There's some trappings, sure, and their revolution certainly quoted it a lot, but try to find a trace of Kant anywhere in the US. Just consider the US's insistence on a punitive criminal system (instead of rehabilitatory) in the light of the Categorical Imperative. Who, in any sensible state of mind, would consider inflicting suffering to be a desirable universal law.