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Monday, April 14, 2025

Trump, El Salvador prez say deported Md. man can’t be brought back to US despite SCOTUS ruling

 El Salvador President Nayib Bukele claimed Monday that he has no ability to send a Maryland man deported to the Central American country back to the US despite a US Supreme Court ruling directing the Trump administration to take “steps to facilitate” his return.

“I hope you are not suggesting that I smuggle terrorists into the United States,” Bukele told reporters while sitting alongside President Trump in the Oval Office. “Of course, I’m not going to do it.

“The question is preposterous,” Bukele added. “I don’t have the power to return him to the United States.”

President Trump welcomed El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele to the White House Monday.AFP via Getty Images

Kilmar Abrego García was sent last month to the notoriously brutal and overcrowded Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) alongside about 260 suspected gang members under the 18th-century Alien Enemies Act.

The Trump administration claims that Abrego Garcia illegally entered the country in 2011, a statement two lower courts have affirmed.

“First and foremost, he was illegally in our country,” US Attorney General Pam Bondi told reporters about Abrego García Monday. “That’s up to El Salvador if they want to return him. That’s not up to us.”

Secretary of State Marco Rubio similarly stated that “the foreign policy of the United States is conducted by the president of the United States, not by a court.”

“That’s where you deport people — back to their country of origin,” he argued.

But a 2019 order from an immigration judge restricted the government from deporting Abrego Garcia back to El Salvador due to concerns that he could face persecution from groups like the Barrio 18 gang.

Kilmar Abrego García’s legal team has denied allegations that he has ties to gangbangers.via REUTERS

Justice Department lawyers initially acknowledged in court documents that Abrego Garcia’s deportation was due to an “administrative error” and a “clerical error.”

White House deputy chief of staff for policy Stephen Miller denied that claim Monday.

“That’s a big fact that all of you, most of you, have gotten wrong,” Miller told reporters ahead of Bukele’s meeting with Trump. “No one was mistakenly sent anywhere.”

El Salvador’s Terrorism Confinement Center is notorious for its tough conditions.AP

“The only mistake that was made is a [Justice Department] lawyer put an incorrect line in a legal filing [and has] since been relieved,” he said. “[Abrego Garcia] is an illegal alien. He was deported to El Salvador.”

A Maryland federal judge had set an April 7 deadline for Abrego García’s return to US soil.

In an order handed down April 10, the high court directed the administration “to ‘facilitate’ Abrego Garcia’s release from custody in El Salvador and to ensure that his case is handled as it would have been had he not been improperly sent to El Salvador” — though the deadline was no longer in effect.

The Supreme Court also ruled that the lower courts must show “deference owed to the Executive Branch in the conduct of foreign affairs.”

In a Sunday court filing, the administration argued that the Supreme Court’s ruling does not mean that the US is obligated to press El Salvador for Abrego Garcia’s release.

Stephen Miller argued that the Justice Department messed up in a court filing by saying the Maryland man was wrongly deported.Getty Images

“Taking ‘all available steps to facilitate’ the return of Abrego Garcia is thus best read as taking all available steps to remove any domestic obstacles that would otherwise impede the alien’s ability to return here,” DOJ lawyers wrote in a court filing Sunday.

“Indeed, no other reading of ‘facilitate’ is tenable—or constitutional—here.”

On Sunday, Trump said that the 260 people deported “are now in the sole custody of El Salvador.”

Bukele is the first Latin American leader to score a White House visit with Trump during his second term.

https://nypost.com/2025/04/14/us-news/trump-el-salvador-president-say-deported-maryland-man-cant-be-brought-back-to-us-question-is-preposterous/

Nexalin Patent for Deep Intracranial Frequency Stimulation Tech for Substance Use Disorders



Nexalin Technology (Nasdaq: NXL) has received USPTO patent approval for its Deep Intracranial Frequency Stimulation (DIFS™) technology, specifically for treating Substance Use Disorders (SUDs). The patent, titled 'Alternating Current Dynamic Frequency Stimulation Method for Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Substance Use Disorder (SUD),' strengthens the company's intellectual property portfolio.

DIFS™ is a non-invasive, drug-free treatment designed to help individuals with various substance use disorders, including opioid, alcohol, and stimulant addictions. The technology works by applying deep-brain stimulation at dynamic frequencies to regulate neural pathways associated with addiction and withdrawal symptoms.

The technology aims to address chronic relapse by targeting underlying anxiety, depression, and cravings through neuromodulation, potentially offering an alternative to traditional treatments like medication-assisted therapy (MAT) that may have accessibility issues and side effects.

Neurocrine upgraded to Outperform at RBC Capital following pullback

  RBC Capital upgraded Neurocrine (NBIX) to Outperform from Sector Perform with a price target of $137, down from $138. Weakness in the shares that comes alongside broader sector and market downside has brought the stock to levels “well below fundamental fair value,” argues the analyst, citing an Ingrezza commercial franchise that the firm expects to be “relatively solid and durable long term” as well as low relative exposure to FDA or tariff concerns that could remain an overhang on others in the group. The firm acknowledges potential for volatility around Q1 and some potential long-term for IRA-related pressure, it sees “a good entry point for a stable, safe mid-cap biotech,” the analyst added.

https://www.tipranks.com/news/the-fly/neurocrine-upgraded-to-outperform-at-rbc-capital-following-pullback

How Multiculturalism Leads to Mass Rape

 by John Hinderaker

We have been writing about the Rotherham scandal since 2014, more than a decade ago. At that time, I summarized the scandal this way:

Rotherham is a city of around 250,000 in Yorkshire, where at least 1,400 girls were raped, and in many instances prostituted, by gangs consisting mostly or entirely of Pakistani men. It seems to be generally acknowledged that the local authorities had a good idea what was going on, but the criminal rings nevertheless flourished for something like 16 years.

Britain’s government appointed a committee to investigate. That committee’s report suggested that commitment to multiculturalism played a part in the abuse of more than 1,000 girls:

Several staff described their nervousness about identifying the ethnic origins of perpetrators for fear of being thought racist; others remembered clear direction from their managers not to do so.

Here as elsewhere, Britain’s police were more worried about enforcing a left-wing consensus than enforcing the law.

So what has happened in the ten years that have elapsed since the Rotherham scandal came to light? It turns out that Rotherham was not a one-off. In many cities across England, Muslim men were raping, prostituting, and sometimes murdering, young–often pre-teen–English girls. As these crimes have continued to come to light, demands have spread for a comprehensive investigation into how such outrages could happen. Rather than responding to such requests for justice, Britain’s government has tried to stamp them out. In the eyes of the U.K.’s elites, it is of paramount importance that their multicultural narrative not be sullied.

Mark Steyn has tried for years to bring attention to Britain’s gang rape scandal. For example:

It seems reasonable to assume that the mass sexual exploitation of young girls is occurring in every English town with even a modest (as in Rotherham) “Asian” population, boundlessly cocksure and assertive, and a feeble British officialdom too cowed and appeasing to resist. The real word for what is happening is evil – for a society that will not defend its youngest and most vulnerable girls is surely capable of rationalizing many more wicked accommodations in the years ahead.

After all this time, the U.K. is being roiled by demands for a comprehensive investigation of the industrial-scale rape and sexual abuse that has been inflicted on that country’s girls. But the Labour government, having initially pledged such an investigation, has now backed off:

It was bad enough in January, when Labour rejected widespread demands for a full, national, public inquiry – and instead promised five measly local inquiries. Yet on Tuesday afternoon, we discovered that even those meagre sops may be denied us. Because, at the last possible moment before the Easter parliamentary recess, the Government slipped out a statement, announcing that it will instead adopt a “flexible approach” – meaning that, if the relevant councils don’t fancy an inquiry, they can choose to spend the allocated funds in some other, “more bespoke” way.

Yeah, right. Let’s sweep the whole thing under the rug. Many speculate that Labour doesn’t want to investigate, because some of its own leaders have been involved in raping underage girls. I have no idea whether that is true or not, but one wonders: why, exactly, would a government want to deep-six a mass rape scandal, impacting many thousands of girls and their families? Has rape ceased to be a crime if it is committed by an “Asian”?

Imagine that the roles in this scandal had been reversed. Imagine that, for many years, in scores of towns across this country, gangs composed of white, British, predominantly Christian men had specifically targeted Muslim girls. And imagine that, while raping these countless thousands of Muslim girls, the white, British, predominantly Christian gangs had called them “Muslim sl–s” and “Muslim wh—s”.

In response to such a horrific scandal, what do we think this Labour government would have done? Surely it would, quite rightly, have launched a full, national, public inquiry, wouldn’t it?

No doubt many people will reply that the answer is yes. After lengthy reflection, though, I disagree. I think there would have been no inquiry at all – for the simple reason that holding one would have been impossible.

Because, had the scandal above actually taken place, and then been exposed, our country would now be an uninhabitable smoking ruin.

When a country prioritizes left-wing social experiments over fundamental law enforcement, it is doomed.

https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2025/04/how-multiculturalism-leads-to-mass-rape.php

Good Men Are Hard to Find

 by John Hinderaker

The Luigi Mangione phenomenon is disgusting. He has many thousands of fans, most of them young women, who applaud his murder of Brian Thompson. A large amount of money has been raised for his defense, and his appearances in court are greeted by throngs of admirers. Mangione’s killing of Thompson is seen as a political murder, much like the assassination of Abraham Lincoln by John Wilkes Booth, only in this case, the murder was committed to advance a cause that is popular on the Left–socialized medicine.

The New York Post reports on a CNN interview of former New York Times and Washington Post employee Taylor Lorenz, who is a fan of Luigi. What a triumvirate! CNN, Taylor Lorenz, and Luigi Mangione.

Taylor Lorenz heaped praise on accused UnitedHealthcare CEO assassin Luigi Mangione and slammed the media for criticizing the legion of unhinged youths who consider him a hero or role model.

“It’s hilarious to see these millionaire media pundits on TV clutching their pearls about someone stanning a murderer when this is the United States of America — as if we don’t lionize criminals,” the influencer and former reporter for the New York Times and Washington Post told CNN in a bubbly interview.

Bubbly. Do we actually lionize criminals? Murderers, specifically? Yes, occasionally Leftists who commit murder to advance the cause of socialism are applauded. One thinks of Che Guevara, Angela Davis, Mumia Abu-Jamal, Rubin Carter, Joanne Chesimard, and others. But their appeal was decidedly niche, and in most cases, their supporters at least pretended to believe that they were innocent. Whereas Luigi Mangione is popular in relatively mainstream circles, despite the fact that no one pretends that he didn’t murder Thompson.

More:

O’Sullivan asked Lorenz about the media’s typically negative reactions to the fangirls who have shown up in force at his court appearances, and she said she felt their veneration of the accused murderer made perfect sense.

“You’re gonna see women especially that feel like, ‘oh my God, here’s this man who’s a revolutionary, who’s famous, who’s handsome, who’s young, who’s smart, he’s a person that seems like this morally good man,’ which is hard to find,” Lorenz said as she and CNN correspondent Donnie O’Sullivan laughed gaily.

Morally good men are hard to find? I don’t know. It isn’t difficult to find men who aren’t murderers. The Luigi Mangione phenomenon and the Taylor Lorenz phenomenon are both symptoms of a culture that is sick, perhaps terminally so.

https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2025/04/good-men-are-hard-to-find.php

China Would Lose a ‘Trade War’ With the US—’Gradually, then Suddenly’

 No one wants a “trade war” with China, or for that matter with any nation. Nonetheless, China has been waging one for years and is now locked in a tariff recalibration with the Trump administration.

In this American effort to find trade parity and equity, China can do some short-term damage to the U.S., especially in terms of ceasing exports of some pharmaceuticals, phones, and computers. But ultimately, it cannot win—and will eventually lose catastrophically. It will likely accept that reality sooner rather than later.

We are only in the first week of the escalating rhetoric and tariffs. But already China is appealing to its Asian rivals, Australia, and the EU to join in fighting the supposed American bully.

But so far, there are understandably few takers.

An exasperated China is now also running vintage Korean War-era propaganda videos of Mao Zedong bragging about how he was standing up to then-President Dwight Eisenhower.

Does Beijing really believe that airing ossified threats from decades ago—issued by the greatest mass killer in human history to the one U.S. president who warned of the military-industrial complex—is going to win over neutral nations?

Or maybe China thinks calls to Western nations to stop American trade “bullying” will resonate—this, from the greatest trade bully, cheat, and rogue commercial nation in history.

China is running a nearly $1-trillion trade surplus with the world. Its mercantilism is the result of market manipulations, product dumping, asymmetrical tariffs, patent, copyright and technology theft, a corrupt Chinese judicial system, and Western laxity—or what might be mildly called “bullying.” The U.S. accounts for about a third of China’s trade surplus, with most of the EU and Asian nations accounting for the other two-thirds.

In the past, third-party nations did not appreciate the ends to which China has gone to warp the international trading system. In one sense, unable to address their deficits with China, our friends and neutrals turned to America, where they sought to make up their trade asymmetries by going China-light and running surpluses with the U.S.

However much they criticize the United States, it is unlikely that European and Asian nations will join China—which imposes high tariffs and steals from them—in order to gang up on the U.S., which has tolerated massive trade deficits for decades.

To the degree that the world accepts China as an international commercial rogue nation, it does so out of fear —or, again, on the assumption it can recycle its deficits with Beijing by running surpluses with the vast open American market.

Countries like Panama, which once thought China’s Belt and Road Initiative was advantageous, soon learned that it was exploitative. Nothing is free with China. Its Silk Road policy is mostly designed to manipulate strategically located—and soon to be indebted and subservient—nations as future choke points in times of global tensions and is directed at the West in general and in particular the U.S.

China has done everything possible to incur global distrust and fear.

Most of the world accepts that the COVID-19 epidemic that killed and maimed millions worldwide was birthed in a Wuhan virology lab under the auspices of the People’s Liberation Army. The world also remembers that China and the Chinese-controlled WHO lied repeatedly about the origins and spread of the virus.

The global public may recall that China stopped all domestic flights out of Wuhan on the internal news of the lab leak of the virus, while for days greenlighting nonstop air travel to major European and American cities. The world now accepts that China will never explain exactly when the virus appeared, how it “escaped” from the lab, why it was created in the first place, why Beijing repeatedly lied about all such inquiries, and what happened to an array of whistleblowers who warned of the leak.

China’s so-called allies, such as Russia and India, have historical grievances and ongoing border disputes fueled by Chinese aggression.

NATO, the EU, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and the US also are curious as to why China is using its vast foreign exchange not to lift about a quarter of its population out of third-world-level poverty. Instead, it is frantically building 3-4 nuclear bombs a month, a 700-ship navy, and 2,500 combat aircraft as it ratchets up pressure on Taiwan.

The complexities of trade and tariffs present all sorts of minefields. But the Trump administration is beginning to navigate them, and its trajectory is rather simple. In the next 90 days, it will likely conclude trade deals with our allies and third parties that bring either tariff parity or no tariffs at all that will reduce the U.S. trade deficit.

Of course, our allies and neutrals still use stealth tariffs to ensure advantage by money manipulation, VAT taxes, and pseudo-health and security impediments to free trade. And they deeply resent the Trump administration’s loud denunciations of their surpluses and asymmetrical tariffs. But those machinations can be addressed later in round two after tariff reciprocity or elimination is finalized.

For now, Trump should persuade our allies that if they were not so subject to Chinese mercantilism, they would have more flexibility to ensure fair trade with the U.S. And thus, they should not do something self-destructive and side with China but instead join the U.S. to force China to keep its long-broken promises and play by international rules. A reduced import footprint from China in the U.S. could make room for increased imports from the EU, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan—if they strike parity deals with the Trump administration. Barring that, they should simply get out of the way and not opportunistically cut reformist trade deals with China.

If China really does reduce most of its exports to the U.S., America will have to scramble for a year or so to establish new supply chains and some alternate importers of U.S. products. But after a year of gradual dislocation, China will begin to hemorrhage, and then quite suddenly, given the U.S. has almost all the advantages—if it chooses to use them.

One, if it ever comes to a real trade war, remember that nations with the higher tariffs and larger trade surpluses usually lose, given that their economies are far more dependent on mercantile exports and trade imbalances. Psychologically, it is far harder to convince the world of victimhood when tariffs and surpluses illustrate contrived trade aggression.

Two, consensual societies are far more flexible in dealing with external pressures and volatile public opinion. True, Trump must face a midterm election in 18 months. However, Xi Jinping may soon face a third of his export factory workforce unemployed—in a society that has no mechanism for them to vent tensions and objections peacefully.

Three, trillions of trade dollars are at stake as a result of the U.S.-China standoff. And should China escalate, it may well lose elsewhere as well. There are nearly 300,000 Chinese students here in the U.S. and now very few Americans in China—plus an unknown number of young Chinese males who mysteriously and illegally crossed the border en masse during the Biden illegal alien influx. A small percentage—but still a significant number, say 1%, or 3,000 “students”—are likely actively engaged in espionage. More importantly, thousands of PhDs and MAs return to China as now Westernized researchers, professors, and government and corporate scientists in technology, engineering, and mathematics.

The results of such technology absorption are not hard to fathom. Almost every Chinese jet fighter, armored vehicle, missile, or rocket; almost every EV automobile; and almost every solar panel have their origins in either U.S. and European research and development or from Western-trained Chinese engineers.

American universities recruit Chinese students and then often charge premium tuition without discounts or scholarships, but then again, universities are not especially popular now. The Trump administration may feel that if the trade war escalates, then it can always choose to recall visas from Chinese students—in the manner there were few Soviet Russian students in the U.S. during the Cold War. That step would serve a dual purpose by forcing universities to recalibrate their finances and cut their unnecessary or deleterious programs.

Almost every Western institution proves a source of Chinese dependency and vulnerability. Its secretive companies are freely listed on Western stock exchanges, even though their financial and earnings reports are most likely warped. Chinese companies could easily be dropped from these venues. They use Western courts to sue with the expectation of judicial equity, while no Western company in China has any such assurance. Chinese billionaires buy U.S. property, not vice versa.

In terms of self-sufficiency, the U.S. is the world’s largest oil and gas producer. China has four times America’s population but only a third of its oil and gas production. China is desperately trying to catch the U.S. militarily but remains behind in both the quality and quantity of its manpower and munitions. It will take a decade or more to match the U.S. all-nuclear submarine fleet, eleven huge nuclear aircraft carriers, the sophistication and number of 4,000 fighters, bombers, and support aircraft, and the 5,000-6,000 nuclear weapons and the American nuclear triad delivery system.

Morally, China is the only major country that holds an entire ethnic minority—over a million Uyghurs—as virtual indentured servants. If China moves on Taiwan, it will face tough global sanctions. If the Ukraine war ends this year, there will be efforts by the Trump administration to adopt Kissingerian triangulation to see that Russia is no closer to China than to the U.S.

In sum, if the Trump administration can conclude first-round—good enough but not yet perfect— trade deals in the next few weeks with major EU countries, Japan, and other Asian and Pacific powerhouses, and then redirect to China, it will gain both political support and economic advantage. It also must message strategically, given that China, for a half-century, has waged a quiet trade war that has now birthed a loud reaction. So, the administration must remember that the current status quo is the aberration, and its correction is a return to normalcy.

After all, in the end, the EU and Asian nations should know the difference between their protective and rules-based ally, with whom they have run up huge and unfair surpluses, and a rogue bully, whose flagrant violations of trade norms and unfair tariffs have ensured them large trade deficits. And if they don’t calibrate their economic self-interest, but act emotionally, then they should at least consider realpolitik facts, such as which nation has the larger economy, the more open political system, and the largest and most lethal military that, in extremis, would come to their aid—against a bullying China.

Victor Davis Hanson is a distinguished fellow of the Center for American Greatness and the Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. 

https://amgreatness.com/2025/04/14/china-would-lose-a-trade-war-with-the-us-gradually-then-suddenly/