When bureaucracy overcomes logic (and common sense)
Ah, the American dream: work hard, start a family and… be deported by mistake to a prison in El Salvador while the government plays “it wasn’t me.” Kilmar Ábrego García, a man with a work permit and protection from deportation, was “kidnapped” (his wife’s words, not ours) in front of his 5-year-old son. The reason? A “administrative error”, because of course, what better excuse to ruin a life.
The judge vs. the political circus
Federal judge Paula Xinis, fed up with the Trump government and President Nayib Bukele passing the buck like in an improvised soccer game, has ordered affidavits to find out who fell asleep at the keyboard. Meanwhile, the White House insists that they “cannot interfere in diplomacy” (translation: “we don’t feel like it”). And the Savior? Bukele compared returning Ábrego to “putting a terrorist in the United States,” because nothing says “sense” like comparing a metalworker to Al-Qaeda.
The most ironic thing: Ábrego had legal protection since 2019 because, surprise, the gangs in his country wanted to kill him. But the Trump administration deported him anyway, because why follow court orders when you can follow your “political agenda”? Of course, they later admitted the mistake… but refused to correct it. Classic.
The result? A man trapped in a Salvadoran prison, a family destroyed and a government that plays “I see, I don’t see” with the Supreme Court. Meanwhile, Judge Xinis, with the patience of a saint, continues to strike left and right: “The Supreme Court has spoken,” she ruled, making it clear that press conferences are not courts (although some politicians still do not understand it).
Moral? If the immigration system were an airplane, it would be piloted by a monkey with a martini. Meanwhile, Ábrego’s family continues to wait for justice… and for someone in the government to learn to use a spell checker before deporting people.
Are you outraged by this case? Share this story and continue exploring more abuses of the immigration system. Because, apparently, someone has to keep governments in check.




