Political actors can attempt to dismantle decentralized militant movements not primarily through mass prosecutions but by repurposing administrative and intelligence tools—designations, funding restrictions, credentialing rules, and interagency guidance—to choke networks’ public presence and logistics. That pathway converts a political protest problem into an enforcement and personnel‑management campaign under executive control.
— If governments treat protest‑adjacent groups as security targets and use non‑criminal administrative levers to disable them, it raises urgent questions about due process, civil‑liberties safeguards, and the power of the executive branch to regulate domestic political contention.
Christopher F. Rufo
2025.12.30
100% relevant
Christopher Rufo’s interview with Kyle Shideler (Center for Security Policy) argues for understanding Antifa’s ideology and operations in order to predict and preempt acts, and discusses (implicitly and explicitly) Trump‑era administrative options to 'shut down' the network—an instance of converting protest governance into administrative enforcement.
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