Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Fascist Move of the Day
TSA workers miss their second paycheck and quit en masse. Trump's solution: don't pay them — deploy ICE agents to airports instead. Immigration enforcement is now the face of domestic transit security.
Source: The Guardian, March 23 2026
Historical Parallel
In the months following Hitler's appointment as Chancellor in January 1933, SA stormtroopers and SS units began appearing at German railway stations, post offices, and public squares — not as police, but as "auxiliaries." They wore party uniforms. They were not legally bound by the same constraints as civil police. They asked for papers. They detained people. They reported to the movement, not to the law. The official explanation was always "security assistance" — the existing institutions were overwhelmed, or corrupt, or insufficiently committed to national security, and these forces were simply filling the gap. The Reichsbahn (state railway) maintained its own police force during this period. It continued to operate. It was simply joined by other men in uniforms who operated by different rules.
The technique of deploying a second, parallel security force into civilian spaces — one that serves a political rather than purely institutional function — is not primarily about what happens at the checkpoint. It is about normalizing a new kind of presence. When the person checking your papers is a TSA agent, your relationship is administrative. When the person checking your papers is an ICE agent, your relationship is something else entirely. The function is the same. The implications are not.
"Pay these people! Help explain to me that the congresspeople — they're getting paid on time regularly. But these people who work for $40,000 a year, you're holding them up over some politics."
— Dr. Paul Brown, president and dean of the Phillips School of Theology, waiting in line at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson airport, March 23 2026Sources: USHMM — The SS · Wikipedia: SA Role in Early Nazi Power
The Full Dispatch
TSA workers missed their second paycheck on Friday as the Department of Homeland Security shutdown entered its second week. Hundreds have quit. Security lines at major airports stretched for hours — at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson, passengers who arrived before sunrise were still waiting at 9am. People missed flights. Clear, the premium security bypass service, went down due to staffing shortages. LaGuardia shut down for hours after a plane crashed into a truck on the runway. "It's total chaos," said one traveler who had been in line for three hours before his 9am flight. This is the state of domestic air travel in the most powerful country on earth, today.
Trump's solution was not to fund the agency whose workers he hasn't paid. His solution was to deploy ICE agents to airports in eleven cities — Atlanta, Chicago, Philadelphia, Houston, Phoenix, Cleveland, Fort Myers, New Orleans, JFK, Newark, and LaGuardia — to assist with passenger screening. ICE agents are not trained airport security screeners. They are immigration enforcement officers. Their presence at airport checkpoints is not a security enhancement. It is a demonstration: the federal government's immigration enforcement apparatus is now the face of domestic civilian transit security, and it is there because Trump chose not to pay the people whose job it is.
This is not improvisation. It is the mechanics of manufactured crisis. The budget impasse exists because Trump has made passing the Save America Act — his voter suppression bill — a precondition for any DHS funding. Democrats refused. TSA workers stopped getting paid. Workers started quitting. Airports became chaotic. The chaotic airports justified the deployment of ICE. The deployment of ICE normalizes the presence of immigration enforcement in domestic civilian spaces. The sequence is: create the crisis, then use the crisis to justify the change you wanted to make anyway. The change is: immigration agents at airport checkpoints is now normal.
The SA auxiliaries at German train stations in 1933 were not, in most cases, rounding people up immediately. They were present. They were asking for papers. They were establishing a new baseline for what normal felt like in a German public space. The Gestapo would later be dramatically understaffed — famously reliant on civilian informants — but its power came substantially from the belief that agents could be anywhere, that they had access to any space, that the distinction between the SS and the regular police had effectively dissolved. Trump's ICE deployment to airports is in its early phase. The agents are there to "assist." But the question isn't what they do on day one. It's what the presence establishes as a precedent, and what the precedent makes possible next.
The Playbook
Defund the civilian agency — manufacture the crisis → Deploy immigration enforcement to fill the gap → Normalize paramilitary presence in civilian transit spaces → Blur the line between airport security and immigration enforcement → The checkpoint is now theirs