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Showing Original Post only (View all)The Official Voice of the US Government Is Cruel, Gross, and Weird. What Is That Doing to Us? [View all]
Jon Cooper
@joncooper-us.bsky.social
At the moment, the official voice of the US government is a rancid mixture of trolling, cruelty, propaganda, and crass jokes about the human suffering theyre creating.
At the moment, the official voice of the US government is a rancid mixture of trolling, cruelty, propaganda, and crass jokes about the human suffering theyâre creating.
— Jon Cooper (@joncooper-us.bsky.social) 2025-11-17T15:10:46.029Z
Joking memes about imprisonment, deportation, and death by alligator are designed to radicalize and desensitize.
In March, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested a woman they accused of drug trafficking and entering the country illegally. Standing in a parking lot, they photographed her, weeping, eyes half-closed in anguish, her arms cuffed behind her back. And thenin a cruel innovation specific to the Trump administrationthe White Houses official Twitter account used an AI tool to make a cartoon illustration of her crying and handcuffed, in the style of the beloved Japanese animation studio Studio Ghibli. The tweet got 155,000 likes, a mix of outraged and delighted responses, and, as it was designed to, a lot of attention: its so far been viewed 76 million times. On Twitter, many users posted positive responses declaring that the image was exactly what they had voted for.
This is, at the moment, the official voice of the US government: a rancid mixture of trolling, cruelty, propaganda, and crass jokes about the human suffering theyre creating, an effort, as Wireds Tess Owen recently put it, to turn actions like mass deportation into one big joke. On Instagram and Twitter (their largest audience), government entities including the White House, ICE, and the Department of Homeland Security attempt to surf viral trends to expanded public attention: They twist memes and sounds popular on TikTok, repurpose South Parks parodies for their own self-promotion, and blend it all with images that draw on or directly reproduce classical art and Americana paintings that are designed to stir nostalgia for an imagined past. (The use of some of this art, as the Washington Post has written, has stirred the ire of the artists themselves or their representatives; its not easy to extract a stern condemnation from the estate of treacly pastoral painter Thomas Kinkade, but this government managed to do it.)
A lot of the trends are specifically designed to appeal to young white men, like one that repurposes a 1970s-looking ad for a van to ask, Want to deport illegals with your absolute boys? Another ICE recruitment effort asks, Which way, American man? in front a befuddled-looking Uncle Sam gazing at a crossroads post labeled with signs including INVASION, CULTURAL DECLINE pointing one way, and, pointing the other, SERVICE, OPPORTUNITY; in Uncle Sams hands lies LAW AND ORDER. The phrase Which way, American man? is a barely altered reference to the phrase Which way, Western man?, the title of a book by white nationalist author William Gayley Simpson thats been popularized by the far right as a meme. In this case, the white supremacist undertones are more like overtones.
In March, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested a woman they accused of drug trafficking and entering the country illegally. Standing in a parking lot, they photographed her, weeping, eyes half-closed in anguish, her arms cuffed behind her back. And thenin a cruel innovation specific to the Trump administrationthe White Houses official Twitter account used an AI tool to make a cartoon illustration of her crying and handcuffed, in the style of the beloved Japanese animation studio Studio Ghibli. The tweet got 155,000 likes, a mix of outraged and delighted responses, and, as it was designed to, a lot of attention: its so far been viewed 76 million times. On Twitter, many users posted positive responses declaring that the image was exactly what they had voted for.
This is, at the moment, the official voice of the US government: a rancid mixture of trolling, cruelty, propaganda, and crass jokes about the human suffering theyre creating, an effort, as Wireds Tess Owen recently put it, to turn actions like mass deportation into one big joke. On Instagram and Twitter (their largest audience), government entities including the White House, ICE, and the Department of Homeland Security attempt to surf viral trends to expanded public attention: They twist memes and sounds popular on TikTok, repurpose South Parks parodies for their own self-promotion, and blend it all with images that draw on or directly reproduce classical art and Americana paintings that are designed to stir nostalgia for an imagined past. (The use of some of this art, as the Washington Post has written, has stirred the ire of the artists themselves or their representatives; its not easy to extract a stern condemnation from the estate of treacly pastoral painter Thomas Kinkade, but this government managed to do it.)
A lot of the trends are specifically designed to appeal to young white men, like one that repurposes a 1970s-looking ad for a van to ask, Want to deport illegals with your absolute boys? Another ICE recruitment effort asks, Which way, American man? in front a befuddled-looking Uncle Sam gazing at a crossroads post labeled with signs including INVASION, CULTURAL DECLINE pointing one way, and, pointing the other, SERVICE, OPPORTUNITY; in Uncle Sams hands lies LAW AND ORDER. The phrase Which way, American man? is a barely altered reference to the phrase Which way, Western man?, the title of a book by white nationalist author William Gayley Simpson thats been popularized by the far right as a meme. In this case, the white supremacist undertones are more like overtones.
Read More: https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2025/08/trump-administration-propaganda/
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We have lost our humanity
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The Official Voice of the US Government Is Cruel, Gross, and Weird. What Is That Doing to Us? [View all]
sheshe2
Monday
OP
No, we have not lost our humanity, but, unfortunately a portion of our country has.
Biophilic
Monday
#2
on the positive side, who really follows these people online except psychos?
LymphocyteLover
Monday
#5