perihelions 3 hours ago

The US did this before; there was a Cold War-era law SCOTUS ruled unconstitutional in 1964.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aptheker_v._Secretary_of_State ("Aptheker v. Secretary of State" (1964))

> In Aptheker, the petitioner challenged Section 6 of the Subversive Activities Control Act of 1950, which made it a crime for any member of a Communist organization to attempt to use or obtain a passport.[1]"

Some expanded context,

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_movement_under_Unit... ("Freedom of movement under United States law")

mdhb 7 hours ago

So this would mean that not only can you not enter the country if you make fun of Charlie Kirk but you now wouldn’t be able to leave as well?

It’s very obvious at this point that they are absolutely sure that they aren’t going to be “out of power” any time soon.

  • frogperson an hour ago

    They can not leave power or they will all br prosecuted. They are all very motivated to work together and remain in power. It cant last forever. Individually they are too selfish, short sighted, and incompetent to rule for long.

    They might have dreams of a 100 year 4th reich, but its not going to happen.

  • dzonga 3 hours ago

    all signs are pointing to this - that these guys are not willing to be out of power soon.

    from the white house redecorations, to the trump 2028 hats, to the gerrymandering going on in many states. capture of judiciary, suppression of free speech etc. the 'us' vs 'them' mentality.

    • libertine an hour ago

      In the end the question is: will democratic institutions hold? I think we won't know the answer until they don't.

      I think it would be unprecedented in the US, and over the years the red flags have been increasing, so the signs aren't good - but not there yet.

      • randrus an hour ago

        What’s your favorite democratic institution? My favorite is separation of powers.

        Would you say it’s holding?

        • libertine an hour ago

          No, separation of power isn't in great shape unfortunately.

          But I don't think it has collapsed yet, or you think it has?

          Mine is probably free speech, it's also not in a great shape either. But without separation of powers, free speech is quick to crumble into a precarious position.

  • b3ing 4 hours ago

    You’d think they would want people that disagree to leave so they could have more votes in their favor

    • mdhb 3 hours ago

      I don’t think it’s going to much matter who you vote for moving forward, the results will be the same either way.

      • burnt-resistor 3 hours ago

        In the Corporate States of America, it never did.

        "There is only one party in the United States, the Property Party; and it has two right wings: Republican and Democrat. Republicans are a bit stupider, more rigid, more doctrinaire in their laissez-faire capitalism than the Democrats, who are cuter, prettier, a bit more corrupt, until recently, and more willing than the Republicans to make small adjustments when the poor, the black, the anti-imperialists get out of hand. But, essentially, there is no difference between the two parties." - Gore Vidal (1975 or before)

        See also: https://elpidio.org/2025/07/12/the-state-of-the-union-gore-v... (original: "The State of the Union" May Day, May 1, 1975 in Esquire)

        • watwut 2 hours ago

          There is huge difference in reality right now and completely assymetric levels of radicalisation.

          • burnt-resistor 28 minutes ago

            Yep. There's shit lite and ultra shit where some bet on ultra shit accelerating towards less shit and other believing ultra shit is really a fragrant utopia that smells like roses. Ultra shit really wants permission to start a civil war purge while shit lite is worried about magazine capacity and the "scary look" of forward grips while a flood of diarrhea is already ankle-deep.

  • saubeidl 6 hours ago

    Charlie Kirk is the Horst Wessel of the 21st century Nazi regime.

    • mkfs 36 minutes ago

      Charlie Kirk was a "literal who" until he was assassinated, and even though his assassination was extremely graphic, and even though it took place at an event where he, at least purportedly, offered discourse with the other side, Kirk probably would have remained a "literal who" had the left not let its collective mask slip in the aftermath. It's really astounding how badly progressives are playing this.

    • dp-hackernews 3 hours ago

      "Who was Horst Wessel, and why are people comparing Charlie Kirk to him? Within hours of Kirk’s death, opposite ends of the political spectrum invoked the Nazi martyr"

      https://forward.com/news/768607/horst-wessel-charlie-kirk-na...

      • watwut 2 hours ago

        > While Kirk’s rhetoric was combative — he railed against immigrants, gender ideology and “global elites” — he operated in a democratic system and advocated for civil disagreement.

        Kirk was openly happy about Pelosi shooting and advocated for a patriot to bail out the shooter.

        Kirk should not be killed. He also was not someone who advocated civil disagreement or anything like that. He helped to create toxic culture that exists now and did it intentionally.

        Horst Wessel was killed at time when Germany was nominally a democracy. Nazi took power only later. It was dying democracy, just like the democracy in the USA is dying.

saubeidl 7 hours ago

The Party of Free Speech, everyone.