Quakertown Chief of Police in Plain Clothes Assaults, Chokes Teen Girls Protesting Fascism

Video evidence is being circulated of a plain clothes man who charged into a group of teenage girls to assault them and put one in a chokehold. The teenagers who tried to help victims of the man were then assaulted by uniformed officers who claimed the unidentified assailant was their Chief of Police.

Quakertown Borough Police Chief Scott McElree, in plain clothes, choking a teenage girl after he violently charged her for protesting fascism.

Suddenly, a man in a tan shirt, since identified as McElree, appears to charge into the group of kids and grab one who had been backing away, holding a phone.

[…]

In the chaos, some people had no idea who the man was, the student said, and started defending themselves against the unknown attacker.

[…]

One of the students who appeared to jump in to defend a classmate against the tan shirted man was then thrown to the ground by a uniformed officer. The officer can be heard on video telling the kid that the man he went after is the chief of police — Scott McElree.

“He didn’t even announce he was chief of police. We were confused,” the student said.

Students were put in detention overnight at the Bucks County Youth Center for defending themselves against an unidentified man who physically attacked them. A person wearing a vest with the word “police” on the back is seen running toward the frame and then out of the frame as the man in tan continues to hold a teen girl in a chokehold.

So uniformed officers were present, saw their chief battering and choking a teen girl, and their response was just to let it continue while they tackled the kids around her trying to help?

Fascism protest indeed.

These kids deserve a medal for exposing McElree.

A quiet consolidation of power is the institutional design that made this possible, with a single man holding police chief, borough manager, and records officer. McElree unilaterally controls the police, the administration, and the records about both. It’s highly unusual.

And the way McElree seized this power is notable.

He has been Quakertown’s police chief two decades, since 2004. In 2007 he grabbed the borough manager job after the previous manager’s “sudden departure”, initially claiming approval for the dual role would only be temporary. The council instead pivoted and approved him as permanent replacement within a month. He’s now 72 years old, sitting on a contract clause that protects him from “any adverse employment action” by council if he resigns from either position.

He’s structurally insulated from consequences, which could explain why he wore plain clothes to charge into a group of teens to grab, shove, batter and choke them while his officers protected him instead of the public.

How did he end up seizing control over Quakertown? I’m glad you asked. He left a 29-year career at a department mid-scandal. That’s the fact. McElree left a Whitemarsh Township police department during a racial profiling case involving a fellow sergeant, a DA criminal investigation, a federal probe, and federal civil rights lawsuits. He was just a SWAT team lead who suddenly landed this police chief’s job within months of the huge racism controversy. The new town “vetted” him unilaterally saying “we investigated”. And where does the SWAT turned Chief live to this day? Not Quakertown, still in Whitemarsh.

As a historian, I noticed a curious footnote to his name from an infamous lynching. About 40 miles west of Whitemarsh in 1911 a violent white mob battered, tortured and publicly burned alive Black steelworker Zachariah Walker. The leading defense attorney for Walker’s suspected killers was Wilmer W. MacElree, referred to then as “the legal sage of Chester County.”

[White violent mobs claimed that Walker] fell from a tree and suffered severe head wounds. After being transported to the Coatesville Hospital and treated for head wounds and a broken jaw while shackled to his bed, a crowd estimated at 2,000 later marched on the hospital and seized Walker, carrying him on the bed from the hospital to Strode Avenue and preparing a large bonfire.

Walker was thrown into the fire three times but managed to escape. On the mob’s last attempt, they cut Walker’s foot off and tied a rope around him and held him in the inferno until he died.

“Don’t give me no crooked death because I’m not white,” Walker told the mob.

As he was burnt to death, a crowd estimated at several thousand looked on and some in the crowd collected his bones as souvenirs. Later that year, Coatesville Police Chief Charles Umsted was indicted for involuntary manslaughter for his failure to the stop the lynching.

Umsted wasn’t merely indicted for failure to stop the lynching; he actively helped provoke it. A police chief who incites mob violence rather than preventing it. This led to passage of the Pennsylvania Anti-Lynching law in 1923, and yet by 1938 Black residents of Coatesville were organizing armed militias to prevent another lynching.

Wrongfully Detained British Tourist Says Trump Concentration Camps are No Vacation

In 1937, the Soviet NKVD issued Order No. 00447, allowing them to arrest anyone, with quotas by region. Officers received two categories of targets:

Exceeding them brought rewards. The system’s defining feature was not cruelty for its own sake but bureaucratic incentivisation of detention. The machinery needed throughput to justify its budget. It found throughput.

In January 2025, the Trump administration set ICE detention targets at 1,200-1,500 per day. ICE’s budget stands at $85 billion, up from $6 billion a decade ago. New recruits receive signing bonuses of $50,000. Multiple guards at the Northwest ICE Processing Center in Tacoma independently told a detained British tourist that agents receive per-head bonuses for every person they bring in.

The NKVD didn’t publish its incentive structures either. ICE doesn’t either.

The British tourist was Karen Newton, 65, retired school administrator from Hertfordshire, no criminal record, travelling on a valid B2 visa. She was detained for 42 days. The stated justification: she was “guilty by association” with her husband, whose visa had expired. Her specific offence? ICE said helping him pack his suitcase was grounds for jail, which they officially called a detention to strip her rights away along with all her clothing.

Guilt by Association as Legal Doctrine

Soviet law formalised this as ChSIR — Член Семьи Изменника Родины, “Family Member of a Traitor to the Motherland.” Under Article 58 of the Penal Code, wives of accused enemies were automatically sentenced to five to eight years. The ALZHIR camp outside Astana was purpose-built for them. The principle was explicit: kinship itself constituted complicity. It was infamously echoed in American “Red Scare” McCarthyism, which led to outrage and protest.

A US border agent used the English equivalent of this doctrine of “guilty by association” for a woman whose husband’s paperwork had lapsed. The Soviets at least had an acronym.

Voluntary Confession, American Edition

On day three of detention, Karen signed a “voluntary self-removal” agreement waiving her right to see a judge and accepting a ten-year US entry ban. The agent told her it was the fastest route home. She then spent 39 more days in detention.

The Soviet “voluntary confession” operated identically: sign, and your sentence will be lighter. Cooperate, and this ends sooner. Both mechanisms use indefinite detention to manufacture consent to punishment, then continue the punishment regardless. The confession is a trick to increase funding for an additional length of control.

The Trump administration’s version adds a cash incentive. Project Homecoming offers detainees an “exit bonus”, $1,000 raised in January 2026 to $2,600 to “celebrate one year of Trump”, funded by redirecting $250 million from refugee aid. This is, structurally, a bounty system operating in both directions: agents are incentivised to detain, detainees are incentivised to waive their rights and be detained longer while convinced it would help them leave.

The Private Surplus

The Gulag extracted labour. Prisoners built canals, railways, and timber infrastructure the Soviet state couldn’t afford to pay free workers to construct. The economics were integral to the system’s persistence.

The American pivot is to extract profit from detention itself. Corruption of taxpayer money is how Trump is lining the pockets of an incarceration system bigger than North Korea. Kim Jong Un’s political prison camps hold an estimated 80,000-120,000. Trump already detained nearly 80,000 and has announced ICE plans to increase over 100,000. In the shadow of Amazon shipping warehouses and logistics processing boxes, ICE is telling Wall Street the movement of wrongfully detained humans will be an investor gold mine.

Got ICE?

The Northwest ICE Processing Center is operated by GEO Group, a private company paid a daily federal rate per detainee. More bodies, more revenue. The stock price tracks detention policy. This eliminates the need for ideology altogether. The market provides sufficient motive. You can build a Trumpistan gulag on quarterly earnings alone, taking over warehouses to fill with humans.

ICE expects to spend $38.3 billion on acquiring warehouses nationwide and retrofitting them into detention centers holding tens of thousands of people. The plan includes eight “mega centers,” 16 processing centers, and 10 additional facilities, with total planned capacity reaching 100,000 indefinitely detained.

Two warehouse purchases alone cost $172 million, with one in El Paso to hold 8,500 beds. It’s among the largest jails of any kind in the world.

Outside Phoenix, ICE paid $70 million cash for a building the size of seven football fields in an industrial park. City officials said they weren’t aware of the purchase and hadn’t been contacted by DHS.

Warehouses are set up as logistics hubs near airports as a “feeder system” where detainees are briefly processed then sent to massive warehouses. They’re literally using Amazon-era supply chain infrastructure for human processing. The next obvious step will be what to do about all the deaths. And on that note, Trump literally just invoked the war powers act to enable dangerous pesticide use on domestic populations.

Auschwitz II was literally named “Mexiko” by Nazis as a nod to Texas officials who doused immigrants from Mexico in chemicals. A Nazi doctor in 1937 published his report about the El Paso, Texas “Disinfection Plant” in a German pest science journal advocating for use of pesticide Zyklon B (same as Texas) in concentration camps. Over a million were murdered in Auschwitz alone, as that doctor was paid by the pesticide company. Source: USHMM
Nazi Doctor Peters carefully documented and reported President Wilson’s El Paso facility as a template for Auschwitz. The Nazi pesticide chambers were even built with observation ports. German officials in Berlin were known to regularly visit to observe the efficiency of genocide for the “Mexiko” people. Source: The Texas Observer

What the Pattern Predicts

Historically, quota-driven detention systems follow a consistent trajectory. They begin with a target population of limited public sympathy (undocumented migrants, political dissidents, class enemies). Then it expands because the institutional incentives demand expansion. Officers who need 1,500 detentions per day will eventually exhaust the supply of people who fit the original category and begin processing people who don’t. A retired British grandmother detained for packing a suitcase is not an aberration. She is the predictable output of a system that has begun to outrun its stated rationale.

The United States lost 4.5 million international visitors in 2025. The market is pricing in the risk faster than the political system is willing to name it.

Karen Newton’s advice to prospective travellers to America is wise:

DO NOT GO.”

The Gulag’s survivors said the same thing about the Soviet Union for decades. This warning comes from a retired British woman who simply went on holiday to Trumpistan.

AWS in Panic Mode to Coverup AI Caused Outage

The AWS team has pushed a non-denial denial dressed up as a correction. I guess it’s time for this disinformation historian to break down what’s happening:

The Amazon post claims to “correct” an FT report while actually it confirms the core story. Burying it in minimization doesn’t actually contradict it. They admit an AI-related tool (Kiro) caused a production service disruption, then spend every sentence trying to make you forget they just said that.

For the record, an AI agent was asked to fix a bug in Cost Explorer, autonomously decided the right move was to delete the environment and rebuild it, and caused a 13-hour outage in mainland China.

The AWS rhetorical moves to avoid admitting this are so sloppy, perhaps they were written by AI:

Blame displacement: they say “user error—specifically misconfigured access controls”. Yeah, ok, this reframes an AI agent autonomously misconfiguring production infrastructure as equivalent to a human typo. The whole point of the FT story is that AI coding agents can make changes they shouldn’t. Calling the agent action a “user error” is like calling a car crash “road error.”

Wait, no, it’s worse.

FT sources said employees complained about being forced onto Kiro. So the “user error” framing is even more absurd given management was pressuring engineers to use this tool aggressively while simultaneously blaming them when it breaks things. Management demanded rapid adoption, few or no guardrails, and the result seems predictable.

Amazon set an 80% weekly usage target for Kiro and actively tracked adoption rates. They got what they asked for, an outage caused by Kiro.

Scope minimization: “extremely limited,” “single service,” “one of our 39 Geographic Regions,” “did not impact compute, storage, database”… the list goes on and on like they’re not even convinced themselves yet. Look at everything that didn’t break rather than explaining what did break and how, is an annoying rhetorical move.

The big lie: “We implemented numerous safeguards to prevent this from happening again—not because the event had a big impact (it didn’t), but because we insist on learning.” You don’t add mandatory peer review for production access over nothing. That’s a significant operational control change. Denial, denial. That tells you the existing guardrails failed.

Amazon designed a system with no guardrails, mandated aggressive adoption, then called the inevitable result “user error.” That’s just wrong. The FT reported that AI tools were treated as extensions of the operator and given the same permissions, such that operator-level access with no mandatory peer review was never a “misconfigured” anything.

The rough landing: “The Financial Times’ claim that a second event impacted AWS is entirely false.” This is the only categorical denial in the entire piece, which means everything else is carefully worded admission. Simple math. Amazon is really screwing themselves at this point. Why? GeekWire got a clarification from AWS that the second event “did not take place within the AWS business, but elsewhere within Amazon.” So the categorical denial of “entirely false” really are just weasel words about what’s technically within AWS. The second tool was Amazon Q Developer, so it’s still Amazon, still AI, and now shows a pattern.

Zero technical detail: Honestly, this is my biggest complaint. AWS used to care about engineering. For a company that once upon a time published detailed post-incident reports, there’s nothing here. No timeline, no root cause analysis, no explanation of what Kiro actually did or what permissions it had. The COE process they brag about produced what? This press release?

The whole thing reads like legal had an intern who used a chatbot prompt that said “technically don’t lie while giving the impression nothing happened”.

Hegseth Goes Full Nazi in “One Force” Ideological Purge

The defining philosophical move of Nazism, the thing that distinguishes it from generic authoritarianism, is the totalization of function. The person ceases to exist except as an instrument of the collective mission.

Hannah Arendt identified this precisely: totalitarianism doesn’t just suppress dissent, it eliminates the category of the person who could dissent. If you aren’t in, you’re out. Now read Hegseth’s new Nazi rule applied to the U.S. military.

The department must ensure it is building ‘one force’ without subgroups defined by anything other than ability or mission adherence. Efforts to split our troops along lines of identity weaken our force and make us vulnerable. Such efforts must not be tolerated or accommodated.

The stupid. Think about it. The guy appointed to oversee an organization with effectiveness defined by how it splits troops into subgroups, doesn’t believe anyone can be special.

Special forces used to mean something, but not to Nazipants Pete.

Hegseth’s statement does exactly what Nazis do. There are now only two permitted identity traits of “ability or mission adherence”. You are what you do for a Trump mission, or you are nothing.

That’s not a military philosophy. That’s literally Nazi Gleichschaltung forcing every institution, identity, and association into alignment with a single purpose defined from the mouth of an unhinged lunatic at the top.

Elon Musk has been a frequent promoter of an AfD (Nazi) Party in Germany, which generates widespread disgust and protests such as this graffiti outside the Tesla factory.

As a historian I want to double-down on what specifically makes this a Nazi speech by Hegseth rather than just authoritarian:

Banning recognition of identity-based patterns destroys the detection mechanism for discrimination. If you can’t categorize, you can’t measure. If you can’t measure, you can’t identify bias. If you can’t identify bias, bias becomes structurally permanent and invisible.

Hegseth doesn’t just want to enforce conformity, he says he will destroy the capacity to perceive the problem. That’s why book-burning was so much more than the loss of books themselves, as it was destroying the entire framework through which injustice becomes legible.

1933 Berlin, national book burnings were ordered by Hitler after he was “elected” to make Germany great again

Circular self-justification also should be called out. “Ability” is declared the only legitimate criterion, but who assesses ability? The existing hierarchy. Whose biases are embedded in that hierarchy? The question is now prohibited. So the dominant group’s perspective becomes reality itself. “Are you able” is a weapon, not a measurement. The permitted framework of evaluation predefines answers.

Again, we see a purely Nazi epistemic move: declare the particular to be universal, then criminalize any lens that would reveal it as particular.

Universalism disgraced

“One force” sounds like equality. The Nazis also claimed this, building unity as their Volksgemeinschaft, the people’s community. Hegseth is clearly repeating the trick. He will define unity as the erasure of all difference except the categories the leader designates as real. Race is how the Nazis defined “ability”. A supposedly natural, objective criterion replicated the existing power structure exactly.

Hegseth is making statements that redefine what a human being is within the institution, as a functional unit with no legitimate interiority, no group history, no structural position worth recognizing. And he makes his redefinition coercive, exclusionary, by declaring that anyone who resists it “must not be tolerated.”

I can’t believe I have to say this but it also is a self-refuting enforcement point. Saying troops identified by his ideological “ability” review then “must not be tolerated” is itself an act of splitting the force along ideological lines, performing exactly what it prohibits.

There is no policy here. Hegseth has made an ontological claim enforced by threat. He has presented himself as the operational definition of Nazism.