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US, Ecuador Sign Police Exchange Agreement to Combat Organized Crime

US, Ecuador Sign Police Exchange Agreement to Combat Organized Crime

Epoch Times8 hours ago
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem met on July 31 with Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa and members of his administration to sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU) establishing a law enforcement exchange program between the United States and Ecuador.
'In the war against drugs and crime, information is our strongest weapon,' Noem said in a statement released the same day.
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'It's not about history,' White said of American Progress, but rather a 'mythic narrative' of America. 'The original picture erased the reality around it.' White suspects the Trump administration is using the painting now for a similar purpose. The historian lives in Los Angeles, where masked federal immigration agents and military troops spent weeks conducting dragnet immigration operations, an effort he compares to the Nazi regime's Gestapo secret police. 'The real problem is what's actually happening on the streets of Los Angeles and other cities,' he said. Journalist Spencer Ackerman, author of Reign of Terror: How the 9/11 Era Destabilized America and Produced Trump, sees similar far-right currents in DHS's images, strains of nativism he argues have existed just below the surface at the department since its founding in 2002 after the 9/11 terror attacks. 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Government officials have long trafficked in tropes and propaganda about disfavored groups, too, White said, pointing to the virulently racist popular depictions of the Japanese during WWII. What stands out in this present era, however, is the seeming commitment of whole government departments to producing such images. In time, however, White said even these purposely exclusionary images of national propaganda reveal their limitations. 'In myth, nothing ever changes,' he said. 'In history, things do change.'

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