Extermination by Proxy: What the U.S.–El Salvador Prison Deal Really Means
We need to talk about where this is heading—because it’s not just deportations. It’s not just prison outsourcing. It’s something far darker.
In 2025, the U.S. government began sending people to prisons in El Salvador—including those legally residing in the U.S. These are not convicted criminals. Many have not even had trials. And once they leave U.S. soil, they lose constitutional protections. There is no oversight. No due process. No return.
El Salvador profits from this. Each person sent to their prison system is revenue. So what happens when they run out of space? They make more. Not by solving crime—but by expanding the definition of who counts as a threat. That’s how mass incarceration becomes mass extermination—by design or by neglect.
We’ve seen this before:
In Nazi Germany, “undesirables” were first detained and exported before the camps turned deadly.
In Chile, legal residents and citizens alike were “disappeared” in the name of state security.
In Rwanda, it started with rhetoric and policies—and ended in mass graves.
Now, the U.S. is outsourcing the process.
Many believe Abrego García, a legal resident of the United States, may already be dead. He was sent to El Salvador with no trial and no charges that the public can verify. No one has seen or heard from him since. No government agency is answering questions.
This is how extermination begins. Quietly. Systematically. By removing the bodies and cutting off the witnesses.
And with Project 2025 gaining traction—targeting queer people, immigrants, dissidents, and “non-Christian ideologies”—the blueprint is already on the table.
If we normalize shipping people away to die unseen, the leap from disappearance to extermination is inevitable.
We have to draw the line. Right now.