Prøve GULL - Gratis
This Is Fascism - The U.S. is starting to resemble El Salvador's brutal regime.
New York magazine
|March 24 - April 6, 2025
When President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador eagerly volun- teered to receive 261 deportees the Trump administration had possibly illegally airlifted from the U.S. in mid-March, he instantly became one of the biggest stars in American conservative politics.
After the planes landed, disgorging alleged members of Venezuelan and Salvadoran gangs, Bukele wallpapered his X profile with shout-outs from Elon Musk, Marco Rubio, Donald Trump Jr., Matt Gaetz, Senators Mike Lee and Eric Schmitt, and Libs of TikTok, among others. “Thank you to El Salvador and, in particu- lar, President Bukele,” President Trump wrote on Truth Social. When Judge James Boasberg ordered the flights carrying the deportees to return home, Bukele posted, “Oopsie … Too late,” followed by the “tears of joy” emoji.
Bukele’s social-media blitz was arranged around a slickly produced three-minute video—basically an extended commercial for his regime. Over pulsing music straight out of a SicarioPstyle organized-crime thriller, the footage captures the dramatic nighttime arrival of the deportees at a Salvadoran airport. With guards gripping their hair and the backs of their necks, the men are perp-walked down a jetway amid a small army of security personnel in helmets and body armor, then escorted as part of a militarized convoy along jungle-lined highways and through the Olympian front gates of CECOT, the largest maximum-security prison in the world.
Once they are inside, it becomes apparent how brutal the conditions will be. The new prisoners are forced to kneel inside a massive processing hangar, then ordered to shout their names for the camera before guards shave their heads. They change into white uniforms and are herded toward a series of 80-person cells where they will be locked for 23½ hours a day with overhead lights that are never turned off. “The only furniture is tiered metal bunks with no sheets, pillows, or mattresses,” CNN reported after a visit in February. The response from American conservatives to this Leni Riefenstahl–style display of authoritarian theater was sheer delight. “This is exactly what I voted for!” wrote Libs of TikTok. Schmitt described the prison as “beautiful.”
Denne historien er fra March 24 - April 6, 2025-utgaven av New York magazine.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA New York magazine
New York magazine
Chamber Pop
Rosalía's latest album is a stunning left turn.
4 mins
November 17–30, 2025
New York magazine
The Supermodel in the Walk-up
A parlor apartment on East 10th is a shrine to a bygone era of downtown glamour.
2 mins
November 17–30, 2025
New York magazine
Trust in Pluribus
Vince Gilligan's remarkable series is slow television in the truest and best sense.
3 mins
November 17–30, 2025
New York magazine
Her Life Is Material
On Rachel Sennott's I Love LA, True Whitaker plays the resident nepo baby. It's (mostly) true to her upbringing.
6 mins
November 17–30, 2025
New York magazine
The Big Fail
Student achievement has fallen off a cliff. And neither Trump nor the pandemic is to blame.
27 mins
November 17–30, 2025
New York magazine
How BUNNY WILLIAMS Gifts
'With a Name Like Bunny, You Can Imagine the Gifts I Receive'
3 mins
November 17–30, 2025
New York magazine
MAYOR FOR A NEW AGE
November 4 was a historic Election Day in New York—and a wild marathon for Zohran Mamdani.
2 mins
November 17–30, 2025
New York magazine
GIFTS YOU CAN ONLY GET IN PERSON
Now that you've paged through nearly 400 items available to buy online, here's some counterprogramming.
3 mins
November 17–30, 2025
New York magazine
Life in Beige
Are GLP-1's worth a life devoid of pleasure?
6 mins
November 17–30, 2025
New York magazine
The Best Food of 2025
AMID THE FLOOD of French throwbacks and semi-private clubs that have defined dining lately, we've been left craving places that offer real points of view. How lucky that a fresh crop of Chinatown wine bars, Pan-Caribbean tasting counters, and Cambodian canteens do just that. Read on for offal salads, masa cocktails, and more highlights from a year of wildly exciting eating.
6 mins
November 17–30, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
