Judging Freedom - Aaron Maté: ICE Condemns Ideas.
Episode Date: April 16, 2025Aaron Maté: ICE Condemns Ideas.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. ...
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you Hi everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom. Today is Wednesday, April
16th, 2025. Aaron Maté will be here with us in just a moment on ICE, Immigration Customs Enforcement.
Are they in the business of deciding what ideas are illegal?
Yes, they are, even though they're trying to hide it.
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Aaron Mate, welcome here my friend. Before we get to the government trying to suppress
ideas or claiming that some ideas are illegal, do you get the feeling
that the neocons are becoming resurgent in Donald Trump's administration?
Absolutely. The fact that you have Zionist groups able to get students deported for thought crimes,
the latest being this young student in Vermont who was on his way for a citizenship appointment,
and then gets nabbed, and you look at his record,
and he's talking about, you know,
on top of fighting for Palestinian freedom,
he's also calling on anti-Semitism.
It's almost as if they're selecting people
who are actually models for civility,
and saying even if you go out of your way to be civil
and to do everything possible
to call it anti-Semitism from your perspective as a Palestinian rights activist, we're still
going to deport you simply because you support Palestinian rights and you're Palestinian,
as is the case with this young man in Vermont.
So in that respect, the neocons are totally dominant inside the White House.
Now, there are some issues where they're not getting fully their way, like in Ukraine. There's obviously a split between
someone like Steve Witkoff and JD Vance on the one hand, and then you have Marco Rubio,
Mike Walz on the other, who don't seem very keen on peace in Ukraine. And that extends to other
issues as well. Also on this issue of whether or not the U.S. will go to war with Iran, there's
a split inside the Trump White House. But policy-wise, what have we seen so far? Well,
on top of the enforcement of censorship at home, there's also threatening Iran, talking
about making peace in Ukraine, but not really doing very much in the form of concrete steps.
So I think Trump, his himself reflects those divisions. He doesn't know who to listen to yet.
But on some issues, like when it comes to censoring pro-Palestine speech or just speech
that respects Palestinians as human beings, Trump is following neocon Zionist orders.
Hasn't ICE proclaimed in a now deleted post that its job is to prevent the spread of illegal ideas and of
course in America how could any idea be illegal it's an idea it's a thought
Max Blumenthal calls ice Israel censorship enforcers and that's exactly
what they've become they censor people in the US on behalf of Israel.
And yeah, there was a post on social media
bragging about all the things that,
touting all the things that the Department of Homeland
Security prevents from crossing the border.
And one of them is, it's not just crime or drugs,
it's ideas, bad ideas.
It's out of Orwell, it's out of Orwell.
And again, amazingly, those ideas
all concern a foreign country. So under the Trump administration, they'll still tolerate some criticism of the US, but they won't tolerate criticism of Israel. How does that make sense?
but you can't be anti-Semitic. You can say whatever you want about the suffering
of the Palestinian people,
but if you come out in favor of the two-state solution
and you are from the Middle East
and you are here on a student visa, you're gone.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's the world we're living in.
And again, this is an administration that came
to power with a really good argument about Democrats, that they were the party of censorship.
And they were. They were on many issues. We know that from the Twitter files, there was
pressure on social media companies to censor dissenting views, or that weren't in line
with the consensus when it comes to COVID and lockdowns. And in my case, the FBI under Joe Biden asked Twitter to censor me on behalf of Ukraine
because the Ukrainian intelligence service sent the FBI a list of accounts they wanted
censored on Twitter and my name was among them.
And the FBI handed that over.
That came out from the Twitter files.
And that was the basis for Trump and his campaign,
that act of attempted censorship and many others,
for say, look, this is the party of censorship
and we're gonna restore free speech.
And they had a strong argument until they got power
and they went far beyond what Biden ever did
by literally trying to deport people
for having views they don't like about Israel.
So they took the Biden censorship regime
and they put it on steroids.
One of the neocons that you and I did not mention
a few minutes ago, who according to the Wall Street Journal
still has President Trump's ear is General Kellogg.
Now Kellogg just came out with the most absurd proposal,
almost as if he's been living in a cocoon for the past two and a half years,
if he thinks that the Russians would accept this.
This is the so-called division of Ukraine
and the gubernatorial elements run by European allies, much as was done to Germany in 1945. Where does
he come up with something like this? Send Steve Witkoff to meet for five hours with the President
of Russia and then dispatch General Kellogg to make an offer like this.
Trump is incoherent policy-wise.
He has all these people around him.
He probably likes them personally, probably likes having them around.
But policy-wise, there's no single guiding direction.
It's just a bunch of people who he likes and I think he's still figuring it out as he goes
along.
You know, Keith Kellogg said that the Biden strategy of using Ukraine to fight Russia,
he called it the acme of professionalism. That was wonderful that we were using Ukraine to fight
Russia. He said this in congressional testimony a few years ago. So this is who Trump has as
his envoy to Ukraine while also dispatching another envoy to the Middle East, Steve Wyckoff,
to go meet with Vladimir Putin. It just makes absolutely no sense. And now it's my impression
that Keith Kellogg has been sidelined and isn't doing very much, but he's still there in his
position and he's still putting out policy proposals like this and statements. He put out
a statement about the Sumi attack the other day where Russia killed a number of civilians and
he issued
a very, very harsh condemnation.
But what was overlooked there, and again, I'm not trying to justify killing civilians,
nothing can justify that.
But what the media ignored here, and Kellogg ignored, was that Russia was actually targeting
a military ceremony in Sumi.
And this is such a scandal now inside Ukraine that the governor of Sumi has been dismissed
because he's been accused of basically endangering Sumi
by hosting this military ceremony there
by giving Russia a pretext to launch an attack.
And by the way, among the people killed
in this attack in Sumi was the commander
of the Ukrainian division that uses high Mars rockets
and who uses those high Mars or who is guiding
or who has been guiding and directing those high Mars
strikes, it's the US. A few few weeks ago we got that New York Times article
bragging about how the u.s. oversees every single high mar strikes and that
these high mar strikes have caused I'm quoting here Russian casualties to soar
after New York Times comes out with this piece bragging about how high mars are
used to kill Russians Russia goes and kills the Ukrainian head of a brigade that uses high mars in Ukraine. And this is just an example of how the proxy
war endangers Ukrainians. It doesn't just by Russia killing civilians, but it shows
how I mean, this attack on Sumi, it came out of years of war in which US weapons are being
used to kill Russians. According to Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov,
there were also NATO officials
present at that ceremony who were killed.
I wonder if any were Americans.
And if so, if the Trump administration will treat that
the way the Biden administration did
by claiming they had a heart attack elsewhere.
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Well I have to wonder if Lavrov is telling the truth.
I have a hard time believing that Russia would target a military gathering if NATO military
officials were there because Russia has been pretty restrained so far when it comes to escalating this war. In fact, the whole premise of the whole reason this proxy war
has gone on for so long in the way it has is because Russia has not escalated in the ways that
the US has. The US kept crossing its own red lines. Biden ruled out using some weapon systems,
then he allowed them. Biden ruled out using those weapon systems for strikes into Russia,
then he allowed them. It's Russia that's been restrained so far. So is Lavrov now seriously
claiming that the US targeted a gathering where NATO military officials were present?
I actually have a hard time believing that. And it's been interesting, interesting commentary. I
hadn't thought of it that way, Aaron. I'm going to run a piece that I know you have seen because I've seen you and Max comment on it.
It's Prime Minister Netanyahu in the Oval Office after Trump gave his rather pedestrian,
I'm being charitable, understanding of the origins of the Israeli-Gaza dispute.
of the Israeli-Gaza dispute, Netanyahu jumps in as if to bail Trump out. Cut number 19.
I think what the president talked about is, first of all, to give people a choice.
Gazans were closed in.
And any other place, including in arenas of battle,
I mean, whether it's Ukraine or Syria or any other place, people could leave.
Gaza was the only place where they locked them in. We didn't lock them in. They were
locked in. And what is wrong with giving people a choice? Now, we've been talking, including
over lunch, about some countries, I won't go into them right now, that are saying, you
know, if Gazans want to leave, we want
to take them in. And I think this is the right thing to do. If you give, you know, it's going
to take years to rebuild Gaza. In the meantime, people can have an option. The president has
a vision. Countries are responding to that vision. We're working on it. I hope we'll
have good news for you. We didn't lock him in. Let's see how many ex-IDF generals have referred to Gaza
as an open air concentration camp.
Where does he come up with something like this?
And why didn't the press challenge him?
Well, that's a great question.
Why didn't the press challenge such a malicious lie?
I think one of the most malicious lies
that's ever been told in the White House,
and that's a very, very high bar.
Israel has put Gaza under siege for two decades, to the point where even cancer patients have
been denied the permission to leave and get treatment over the years.
And this is long before October 7th.
So Israel locked people of Gaza in.
Egypt participated in that blockade, but it was led by Israel.
And now Netanyahu basically wants everyone to leave.
And he talks about them going to live somewhere else
and then they can come back.
No, they don't want them to come back.
They wanna permanently, ethnically cleanse Gaza.
And he talks about how there are other countries
that are expressing a willingness
to let in Palestinian refugees.
What countries are those?
Do you think Jordan, which already has a majority Palestinian population ruled by a monarchy that
doesn't have a lot of, has some popular support, but not, I don't think the majority, not a lot
of people. Certainly there's a lot of dissension. There's a lot of unrest in Jordan or Egypt.
They want to bring in 2 million Palestinian refugees from Gaza. So what is he talking
about? How other countries want to bring Palestinians in? I think what he's talking about is we're
trying to coerce other countries to accept Palestinians and we're threatening them and
we're offering them enticements. That's what he's talking about. With this claim that
Palestinians have been free to go wherever they want is just such a lie. And that denial of
freedom starts with the denial of their right to return to their own homes. That's the majority
of people in Gaza. It's refugees and the descendants of refugees who come from homes that Israel stole
from them inside Israel starting in 1948. And many Palestinians in Gaza still have the keys to those homes.
Whether those homes still stand or not, that's where they come from.
And that's where Israel's never allowed them to return.
And now to continue that ethnic cleansing process wants them to go somewhere else.
That's been Israel's plan all along. That's why we still have mass murder
being carried out inside Gaza and not a ceasefire in which hostages are going home.
It's because Israel wants to continue its ethnic cleansing project and it has
president Trump's full support.
When, when I was in college in the late sixties and early seventies,
the issue of the right of return, uh, was, was a hot button.
Did any of them get the right to return under a more, uh,
benign Israeli leadership or have all Israeli prime ministers since 1948 precluded and prevented the return?
The most accommodating Israeli leaders when it comes to in peace talks with Palestinians
have been the labor governments of Yitzhak Rabin, Ehud Barak, and then Ehud Omer.
None of them, none of them were willing to accept responsibility and even apologize to
Palestinians for the theft of their homes and ethnic cleansing in 1948.
None of them.
I mean, this came up in the discussions in the Oslo years, in the top talks of the early 2000s,
and in the future talks between Mahmoud Abbas
and Ehud Olmair in the mid aughts.
And no Israeli government, even the most far reaching one
from an Israeli perspective, was willing to acknowledge
Israeli responsibility for the Nakba,
which for Palestinians, I mean,
this is the start of their suffering.
That's why the Nakba, you know, it's called the catastrophe because this was their nightmare.
Now, of course, they're living through a brand new one. And I've always, you know, by contrast, the Palestinian leadership led by Yasser Arafat and then Mahmoud Abbas, if you go and talk to the participants, if you read the documents from that period,
from that period, they were willing to accept some sort of symbolic gesture,
a token number of refugees being allowed back in.
But otherwise they were essentially willing
to give up the right of return.
They just wanted some acknowledgement
by a token acknowledgement of the suffering
and just the fact of the ethnic cleansing
that began in 1948.
But even these far reaching so-called Israeli leaders
who were willing to talk peace with Palestinians
weren't willing to do that. How far to the other extreme is Netanyahu? Does he embrace
the most extremist elements in Zionist ideology? Well, over the years he's sometimes showed that
he stakes a middle ground
between himself and the ultra extremists.
But at this point, who is he allied with in his government?
It's the ultra extremists.
What is the policy he's carrying out in Gaza?
It's the ultra extremist policy.
That's why when he renewed the genocide in Gaza by, you know, relaunching a military
campaign, some of the ultra extremists who had resigned from his cabinet rejoined because they were so thrilled with his policies. So whatever his own personal views are,
I don't think he's personally as religiously extreme as some of the people in his cabinet,
but in terms of policies he's carrying them out right now. Yes. Isn't the essence of Zionism
an ethnic superiority of such magnitude it justifies the slaughter of lesser peoples.
Yes it is now, certainly. Now has it always been that way? Well there were Zionists a long time
ago, more than a hundred years ago, people like Ahadayam who wanted to have a Jewish national home,
a place that could somehow you know preserve and honor Jewish culture, Jewish traditions,
without privileging the
rights of Jews. And that's the kind of Zionism that Noam Chomsky identified with and that
I identified with growing up because, especially in the aftermath of the Holocaust, I think
it's important that any people that is persecuted has a place that protects their culture. So
I see no problem with that. The problem comes when you start to exert your rights at the
expense of someone else. And then in the case of
Palestine, do it on someone else's land. I mean, that's the problem with
Palestine designism didn't always mean what it means today, which absolutely is
ethno supremacism. You know, a funny story. My great grandfather, Joseph
Lovey, who was killed by the Nazis, he was friends with one
of the most fanatic Zionist leaders, Jabotinsky.
Jabotinsky was honest though about Palestine.
He said Zionism is a colonizing adventure and therefore it stands or falls by the question
of armed force.
And he explained basically that we want this land Palestine, but the people there don't
want us.
And people who live in a land are naturally going
to defend it from foreign invaders. And Jabotinsky believed so much in the cause of Zionism that he
was willing to fight into, you know, ethnic Liklan, which is exactly what happened. And I wonder though,
you know, for Jews like my great-grandfather, did he even know that there were already Arabs in
Palestine? Because if you're, you know, a Jewish person in Eastern Europe at the time,
I think you have limited access to information.
And at the time, you know, facing persecution even before the Holocaust,
but certainly during it, obviously, the appeal of a Jewish national home
is that much stronger, some place to protect you.
I understand it.
But I just wonder about so many Jews from that period,
whether they even knew, like Jabotinsky did,
that there were already Arabs there.
And I suspect that, you know, I like to hope at least
that if they did know that, they wouldn't have supported
the colonizing project that Zionism has become.
How'd you find out about your grandfather?
My great grandfather.
This was your great grandfather.
How'd you find out about him?
Well, you know, so it's a long story,
but you know, he was killed in the
concentration camps and he was a physician like my father is and when he got there, we know this from
a survivor who witnessed all this. When he got to the camps, one of the first questions they asked
is, are there any doctors here because we're going to give you a position treating, you know, your fellow concentration camp prisoners. And so my great grandfather put up his hand and that the doctors,
of course, were among the first people that the Nazis exterminated because they didn't want any
doctors around to keep help keep people alive. So that's so we know that story from someone who
witnessed this. And we know that he was friends with Jabotinsky because of people who survived from that time.
And also, I mean, I actually owe my existence quite possibly to Jabotinsky's movement, Beitar,
because when my father Gabor was an infant, the Jews of Budapest were in the Jewish ghetto,
and conditions there were very tough. So my grandmother Judy took my
father Gabor to the Swiss protected glass house, which was a place of refuge in Budapest for Hungarian
Jews. And at first it was so overcrowded that she wasn't let in. But when people from Beitar,
which is Jabotinsky's movement, found out that my grandmother was there with my father, who was then
an infant, they actually got her in. So it's quite possible I wouldn't be alive if not for Beitar.
And funnily enough, Beitar just called, just issued a statement of enemy Jews.
And I'm on that list saying that we shouldn't be allowed back into Israel.
Oh my God. You can't make this stuff up.
So there's a historical irony, you know, they save their, that movement, you
know, saved my father quite probably from the Nazi genocide, but today we're
on opposing sides of the current genocide.
Do you think Donald Trump understands any of this history?
You know, the man judge, I mean, uh, he's made some fair minded statements
in the past about Palestine.
Um, I recall him saying that it was Netanyahu who didn't want to deal, not Abbas.
So that shows to me he has the capacity to be somewhat objective on this.
But if you look at his statements now, I mean, with Netanyahu, he basically, Trump endorsed
the extremist Israeli view that Israel should never have withdrawn its illegal settlers
from the Gaza Strip. He said illegal settlers from the Gaza Strip.
He said that Israel owned the Gaza Strip.
Right.
That was ridiculous when he said that.
And if he was referring to they should never have withdrawn, he articulated it in a way
that made him sound like a dope.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, but you know him, Judge.
I mean, I left to hear your insight on this.
Like, what do you think is going on?
I have never discussed this issue with him.
And he deeply and profoundly frustrates me because of the assaults on civil liberties,
particularly free speech and due process.
I pull my hair out, particularly where I work during the day where his behavior is viewed more charitably than those of us who believe that the Constitution means what it says would view it.
But I have not discussed these things with him.
I've been told by people who know him that he has a personal real dislike of war, that actually he doesn't like war.
And he-
Why doesn't he stop these two wars?
He could call up Netanyahu tonight.
I know, I know, I know.
Listen, in that statement that you and I have viewed,
where he's standing in, well, Chris Rundit,
where he's in Air Force One on Sunday night
saying this is Joe Biden's war. Do you have a reaction to Russia's Poland Sunday attack on the street?
I think it was terrible and I was told they made a mistake, but I think it's a horrible
thing.
I think the whole war is a horrible thing.
I think the war is, for that war to have started started is an abuse of power.
They said they made a mistake.
You were told they made a mistake.
You mean it was unintentional?
They made a mistake.
I believe it was.
Look, you're gonna ask them.
This is Biden's war.
This is not my war.
I've been here for a very short period of time.
This is a war that was under Biden.
He gave him billions and billions of dollars.
He should have never allowed, if he had any
brain, which he didn't have and doesn't have and now it's being proven,
he wouldn't have allowed that war to start. I would have absolutely not, that war would never
have taken place. But remember this, this is Biden's war. I'm just trying to get it stopped
so that we can save a lot of lives. They happen to be Ukrainian and Russian lives.
But all I want to do is get it stopped.
It's his war now, isn't it?
Exactly. Exactly.
I mean, he's making all fair points.
And that would be fair if he wasn't in government right now,
but he happens to be not only in government,
but the president of the United States.
So he speaks as if he's powerless.
I think what he's basically saying there, I think that statement is a reflection of his own
frustration having a divided cabinet. And he doesn't really know how to manage that. He's got
people telling him, don't listen to Steve Witkoff. Don't listen to Putin, keep this war going. And
he's got Witkoff, you know, flying over to Russia, having a nice meeting with Putin. And whatkoff is saying, yeah, I think we can make a deal with this guy. And Trump doesn't quite know
yet what he wants to do, because it will cost him to make a peace deal. He's going to get a lot of
heat from not only members of his own cabinet, but the bipartisan uniparty in Washington. And he's,
I think he's kicking the can down the road. He just doesn't want to spend the political capital
on making peace because that's difficult.
So I think what you're hearing there is his frustration
and blaming Biden is a very convenient foil.
Yeah, yeah.
One last clip for you.
The new, she's just reprehensible,
the new State Department spokesperson, Tammy Bruce.
Here's her latest nonsense, number 18.
These are people who are the best in the world.
Ambassador Witkoff clearly is one of the best people
in the world for negotiating and for dealing
with bad actors and getting peace and ceasefires.
Did I miss something? Was Witkopf nominated by Trump and confirmed by the Senate?
Or did they just give him the honorary title of ambassador?
Well, as a judge, I'm glad he's flying around the world and Marco Rubio.
He does seem to be relatively compared to everybody else, fair minded and trying to get a deal.
He got a ceasefire deal in Gaza, which he simply, unfortunately, walked away from.
There was recently an account in the New York Times that basically talks about how Trump's
hostage envoy, Adam Boller, made good progress with Hamas.
He met with Hamas.
They had long talks.
They talked about not only this current crisis, but the overall Israel-Palestine conflict,
which is what we want to have happen if we want to resolve conflicts as we speak to adversaries.
But Israel sabotaged the agreement.
They especially sabotaged it because Bowler was getting close to a deal to free Adon Alexander,
the Israeli-American.
That's what, and Trump wanted to have him freed as a win to the American people.
Say, look, I got this American freed.
And when Netanyahu got wind of that, he basically blew up the talks.
So unfortunately, Steve Wyckoff, he knows all this, but he let that happen and has gone
along with it.
And that's just too bad.
I hope he won't walk away from his own achievements when it comes to making peace with Russia.
I wish he would apply the same energy to Gaza as well, because Gaza is a, you know, at least the people of Ukraine
have an army. People of Gaza just, it's, they're defenseless and they're just, every day there's
a new atrocity.
I have the same hopes you do, but I will add one more. That Max Blumenthal starts showing
up at the State Department briefing so he can really interrogate her.
Yeah, yes, that'd be great. I second that. I wonder if they'll let him back in after his last
trip to the State Department. Oh, that's right. He's probably on some kind of a list him and I
forget it was it Sammy O'Larian? I forget. San Husseini, yeah. Yeah, San Husseini. Aaron,
a pleasure. Very touching the story about your great-grandfather and a pleasure to chat with you
Thank you very much. My dear friend. Look forward to seeing you again soon from one genocide to another
Unfortunately, we're currently living through one right now. Thank you judge for having me, of course
Wonderful wonderful human being coming up at three o'clock on all of this, Phil Giraldi,
Judge Napolitano for Judging Freedom. You