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Thursday, June 25, 2026

THE VOYAGE OF THE DAMNED, THEN AND NOW: WHEN LAW BECOMES A WEAPON AGAINST THE VULNERABLE

 

THE VOYAGE OF THE DAMNED, THEN AND NOW: WHEN LAW BECOMES A WEAPON AGAINST THE VULNERABLE

"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." — George Santayana

There are moments in history so shattering, so morally unambiguous in retrospect, that we comfort ourselves with a quiet promise: we would never do that again. We built institutions. We signed conventions. We etched "Never Again" into the stone of our collective conscience. And then, on June 25, 2026, the Supreme Court of the United States handed down its 6–3 decision in Mullin v. Doe — and the ghost of the MS St. Louis sailed back into view, its lights flickering just off the coast of our moral imagination, close enough to see, too inconvenient to acknowledge.

Part I: The Ship That the World Refused to See

To understand why today's ruling is not merely a legal event but a moral catastrophe, you must first sit with the full weight of what happened in May and June of 1939.

Nine hundred and thirty-seven men, women, and children — most of them Jewish families fleeing the systematic terror of Nazi Germany — boarded the MS St. Louis in Hamburg. They had done everything right. They had the papers. They had paid $150 each — a small fortune in 1939 — for legal permission to enter Cuba while they waited on the long American immigration queue. They had followed the rules of a world that was already quietly deciding they did not belong in it.

Captain Gustav Schröder — a non-Nazi German of extraordinary moral courage — commanded his crew to treat every passenger with full human dignity. He could not have known that the world outside his ship had already decided otherwise.

The Cascade of Closed Doors

What followed was not a single act of cruelty. It was a cascade — each closed door making the next one easier to shut.

  • Cuba invalidated their landing permits days before arrival, bowing to rising domestic anti-Semitism and political corruption. Only 28 passengers were allowed ashore.
  • The United States refused to act. President Roosevelt received direct appeals. The State Department cited immigration quotas. A U.S. Coast Guard cutter was deployed — not to rescue the passengers — but to prevent anyone from swimming to shore.
  • Canada slammed its door. Immigration Director Frederick Blair declared that "no country could open its doors wide enough to take in the hundreds of thousands of Jewish people who want to leave Europe." The line, he said, "must be drawn somewhere."
  • Every country in Latin America refused within 48 hours. 

Captain Schröder, refusing to return his passengers directly to Germany, negotiated desperately. Four European nations — Great Britain, France, Belgium, and the Netherlands — agreed to divide the 907 remaining passengers among them. The passengers celebrated. They had escaped Nazi Germany a second time.

They had not.

The Human Cost Written in Numbers

Country of AsylumPassengers AcceptedUltimate Fate
Great Britain288Survived — safe from Nazi occupation
France, Belgium, Netherlands619Caught in the Holocaust after Nazi invasion, 1940

Of those 619 souls who landed on the continent, 254 were murdered in the Holocaust — most of them in the gas chambers of Auschwitz and Sobibór. They had been so close to safety. They had seen the lights of Miami from the deck of their ship.

The Nazis, for their part, used the entire episode as propaganda — proof, they claimed, that Jews were universally unwanted. The world's silence had handed them the megaphone.

Part II: The Courthouse Doors Close — June 25, 2026

Now fast-forward 87 years. The names have changed. The countries of origin are different. The legal mechanisms are more sophisticated, the language more sanitized. But the architecture of abandonment is hauntingly familiar.

Today, the Supreme Court of the United States issued its ruling in Mullin v. Doe — a 6–3 decision authored by Justice Samuel Alito that strips Temporary Protected Status (TPS) protections from over 350,000 Haitian and Syrians currently living and working legally in the United States, while opening the door to the elimination of protections for 1.3 million people from 17 nations — all without meaningful judicial oversight.

What TPS Actually Is

Temporary Protected Status is not a loophole. It is not an act of charity. It is a congressionally created legal framework — passed in 1990 — that allows nationals of countries experiencing ongoing armed conflict, environmental disasters, or extraordinary conditions to live and work legally in the United States until it is safe to return. Haiti qualifies because of catastrophic earthquakes, political assassination, and gang warfare so severe that the State Department itself warns Americans not to travel there. Syria qualifies because of a civil war that has killed hundreds of thousands and displaced millions.

These are not abstract policy designations. They are the legal difference between a family having a home, a job, and a future — and being placed on a deportation flight to a country that may kill them.

What the Court Actually Did

Justice Alito's majority opinion rests on a reading of the 1990 TPS statute that bars courts from reviewing non-constitutional challenges to executive TPS decisions. In plain English: if the administration terminates TPS — even if it does so by ignoring its own legally mandated procedures, even if it does so before receiving required State Department recommendations, even if a federal judge found the decision was a "preordained outcome" driven by political considerations — the courthouse doors are closed. No review. No recourse. No accountability.

District Court Judge Katherine Polk Failla had already found that then-DHS Secretary Kristi Noem took "a hatchet to the TPS system" — making termination decisions "grounded not in law and not in fact, but in political considerations simply not relevant under the TPS statute." The Supreme Court's response, in essence: hatchets are executive tools, and executive tools are unreviewable.

 Part III: The Duck the Court Refuses to Name

Here is where the historical echo becomes almost unbearable in its clarity.

In 1939, the governments that turned away the MS St. Louis did not say "we are turning away these people because they are Jewish." They cited quotas. They cited administrative procedures. They cited the practical impossibility of absorbing large numbers of immigrants. The language was bureaucratic. The intent was something else entirely.

In 2026, Justice Kagan's dissent cuts to the heart of what the majority refuses to confront:

"The evidence is there, plain to see, in the President's statements, which the majority — and for that matter, his own lawyers — cannot even bear to repeat."

What statements? Let the record speak:

  • In 2018, Trump reportedly asked why the U.S. should accept immigrants from Haiti and African nations — which he described as "shithole countries" — suggesting the country should instead bring people from Norway. Norway is approximately 83% white.
  • He described undocumented immigrants as "poisoning the blood of our country" — a phrase with a documented genealogy in white nationalist literature.
  • He told four congresswomen of color — three of whom were born in the United States — to "go back" to the countries "from which they came."

Justice Alito's majority looked at this record and concluded: "None of the cited statements by either the President or the Secretary was overtly racial."

Overtly racial. That phrase is doing the moral weight-lifting of an entire civilization's conscience — and it is collapsing under the load.

One is left to ask, with Justice Kagan's dissent ringing in the ears: what would "overt" look like to this Court? What threshold of stated contempt for human beings from certain nations must be crossed before the Equal Protection Clause of the Fifth Amendment is permitted to function?

The answer the majority has provided is, functionally: a higher one than this.

Part IV: The Architecture of Abandonment — Then and Now

The parallel between 1939 and 2026 is not metaphorical. It is structural.

1939 — MS St. Louis2026 — Mullin v. Doe
Legal visas and permits invalidated by executive decreeLegal TPS status terminated by executive decree
Courts and governments cited procedural/quota rulesCourt rules procedural violations are unreviewable
Discriminatory intent hidden behind administrative languageRacial animus dismissed as "not overtly racial"
Refugees left with no legal recourse350,000+ left with no judicial recourse
World watched and did nothingCourt closed the door and called it law
254 people were murdered as a resultConsequences for deportees remain to be written

The cruelest symmetry of all: in 1939, the Nazis used the world's refusal to accept Jewish refugees as propaganda — proof that even the democracies agreed Jews were unwanted. In 2026, authoritarian governments around the world will use this Supreme Court ruling as validation — proof that even America's highest court agrees that some people's lives are simply less reviewable than others.

Part V: What History Built — And What Is Being Dismantled



The international failure of the MS St. Louis was not forgotten. It became a cornerstone argument in the creation of the 1951 Refugee Convention — the foundational document of modern international refugee law — which established the principle of non-refoulement: the prohibition on returning refugees to places where their lives are in danger.

That principle was built on the bones of 254 people who saw the lights of Miami and were turned away. It was built as a promise — imperfect, contested, but real — that the machinery of law would never again be used so nakedly to abandon the vulnerable.

The Roberts Court's decision in Mullin v. Doe does not technically violate the 1951 Convention. But it does something perhaps more insidious: it removes the domestic legal mechanism by which that promise could be enforced. When courts cannot review whether the executive followed its own procedures, when racial animus is laundered into policy neutrality, when Congress's carefully designed procedural leash is cut by judicial decree — the spirit of non-refoulement is hollowed out from the inside, even as its name remains on the books.

Part VI: The Human Weight Beneath the Legal Architecture

It is easy — dangerously easy — to discuss this ruling in the abstract language of statutory interpretation, judicial review, and executive authority. The Roberts Court has mastered this abstraction. It is the mechanism by which 60 pages of legal reasoning can be written about human beings without once reckoning with their humanity.

So let us be specific about what this ruling means in practice:

A Haitian mother who has lived in the United States for 15 years, raised American-born children, paid taxes, built a life — now faces deportation to a country the State Department itself classifies as a Level 4 "Do Not Travel" destination due to kidnapping, gang violence, and civil unrest.

A Syrian father who fled barrel bombs and chemical weapons attacks, who rebuilt his life here under the legal protection Congress created — now faces the prospect of return to a country still emerging from one of the most devastating civil wars of the 21st century.

These are not statistics. They are the 2026 equivalent of the passengers on the MS St. Louis — people who followed the rules, trusted the law, and are now watching the courthouse doors close in front of them.

 Part VII: The Court in the Mirror of History

The Roberts Court has not yet reached the infamy of Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), which laundered racial apartheid in the language of neutrality for 60 years, or Korematsu v. United States (1944), which blessed the internment of 120,000 Japanese Americans. But the trajectory is visible, the pattern is consistent, and history is watching.

CaseWhat It Did
Shelby County v. Holder (2013)Gutted the Voting Rights Act's preclearance formula
Trump v. Hawaii (2018)Upheld the Muslim travel ban despite documented discriminatory intent
Dobbs v. Jackson (2022)Eliminated 50 years of reproductive rights precedent
Trump v. United States (2024)Granted broad presidential immunity from criminal prosecution
Mullin v. Doe (2026)Eliminated judicial review of TPS decisions; dismissed racial animus evidence

Each decision, viewed individually, can be defended on narrow technical grounds. Viewed together, they form a coherent project: expanding presidential power, contracting accountability, and insulating the executive from the constitutional checks the Founders considered essential.

Justice Jackson, in an earlier TPS dissent, captured the stakes with devastating precision:

"I cannot abide our repeated, gratuitous, and harmful interference with cases pending in lower courts while lives hang in the balance."

She was not speaking abstractly. She was speaking about human beings — 350,000 of them today, potentially 1.3 million tomorrow — whose legal stability has been handed to a president who once described their home countries as unfit to send him immigrants.

Conclusion: The Lights of Miami, Then and Now



In June 1939, the passengers of the MS St. Louis stood on the deck of their ship and looked at the lights of Miami. They could see America. America could see them. The Coast Guard was deployed — not to help them — but to make sure the distance between their hope and the shore remained absolute.

Today, 350,000 people who have already made it to shore, who have built lives here, who have children in American schools and jobs in American communities, are being told by the highest court in the land that the law cannot protect them from an executive that has made its contempt for them a matter of public record.

The ship has changed. The ocean has changed. The legal language has changed.

But the cruelty of the mechanism — the use of law not as a shield for the vulnerable but as a wall against them — is the same. And the question that the passengers of the MS St. Louis asked from the deck of their ship, the question that 254 of them never lived to hear answered, is the same question that 350,000 people are asking today:

Is there anyone on the other side of that door?

History is watching. History always watches. And history, as Santayana warned us, has a very long memory — and very little patience for the comfortable fiction that this time, we didn't know.


Sources: — Facing History & Ourselves: "The Voyage of the St. Louis" (facinghistory.org) — Big Education Ape: "The Fairy Tale Court: How the Roberts Six Turned 'We the People' Into 'Trust the President'" (bigeducationape.blogspot.com, June 25, 2026) — SCOTUSblog: Mullin v. Doe (25-1083) case page (scotusblog.com) — 13News Now: "SCOTUS sides with Trump administration, stripping temporary protected status protections for some migrants in Mullin v. Doe ruling" (13newsnow.com)


Complete Source List: The Voyage of the Damned, Then and Now


⚖️ Legal Sources — Mullin v. Doe & TPS

1. Supreme Court of the United States — Official Opinion 25-1083 Mullin v. Doe (06/25/2026) Full text of Justice Alito's majority opinion and Justice Kagan's dissent. 🔗 https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/25pdf/25-1083_f204.pdf


2. SCOTUSblog — Case Page Mullin v. Doe (25-1083) Full case summary, reversed and remanded 6–3, opinion by Justice Alito, June 25, 2026. 🔗 https://www.scotusblog.com/cases/noem-v-doe-3/


3. Ballotpedia — Case Overview Mullin v. Doe Background on the Syrian nationals' lawsuit blocking DHS revocation of TPS. 🔗 https://ballotpedia.org/Mullin_v._Doe


4. Public Rights Project — Legal Advocacy Page Trump v. Miot / Mullin v. Doe Amicus brief filed April 13, 2026, urging the Supreme Court to preserve TPS for Haitian and Syrian immigrants. 🔗 https://www.publicrightsproject.org/what-we-do/legal-advocacy/miot-v-trump/


5. 13News Now — Breaking News Coverage "SCOTUS sides with Trump administration, stripping temporary protected status protections for some migrants in Mullin v. Doe ruling" 🔗 https://www.13newsnow.com/article/news/nation-world/mullin-doe-supreme-court-immigration/507-6a2e425e-3360-40af-8624-c5a8dfd78e92


6. Big Education Ape — Editorial Analysis "The Fairy Tale Court: How the Roberts Six Turned 'We the People' Into 'Trust the President'" June 25, 2026 — Deep analysis of the ruling's implications for democracy, executive power, and immigrant communities. 🔗 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-fairy-tale-court-how-roberts-six.html


🚢 Historical Sources — MS St. Louis / Voyage of the Damned

7. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) — Holocaust Encyclopedia "Voyage of the St. Louis" The definitive scholarly account of the 937 passengers, the rejection by Cuba, the U.S., and Canada, and the ultimate fate of the passengers. 🔗 https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/voyage-of-the-st-louis


8. HIAS (Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society) "The Shameful Lesson of the 'St. Louis' is as Relevant as Ever" Connects the 1939 tragedy to modern refugee crises and the enduring moral failure of closed borders. 🔗 https://hias.org/news/shameful-lesson-st-louis-relevant-ever/


9. American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) Archives "The Story of the S.S. St. Louis (1939)" Primary archive source documenting the JDC's role in negotiating asylum for passengers in four European nations. 🔗 https://archives.jdc.org/topic-guides/the-story-of-the-s-s-st-louis/


10. Facing History & Ourselves "The Voyage of the St. Louis" Educational resource featuring Holocaust survivor Sol Messinger's firsthand account of the voyage. 🔗 https://www.facinghistory.org/resource-library/voyage-st-louis


11. Facing History & Ourselves — Supplementary Resource "Turned Away on the M.S. St. Louis" Additional survivor testimony and classroom analysis of the moral failures of 1939. 🔗 https://www.facinghistory.org/resource-library/turned-away-ms-st-louis


12. Wikipedia — MS St. Louis "MS St. Louis" Comprehensive overview of the ship's history, passenger manifest, and post-war legacy. 🔗 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MS_St._Louis


13. USHMM — Teacher Resources "The Story of the St. Louis — Teaching Guide" Scholarly lesson framework connecting the voyage to immigration policy, antisemitism, and the Holocaust. 🔗 https://www.ushmm.org/exhibition/st-louis/teach/lesson.htm


🌍 International Law & Refugee Convention

14. UNHCR — The UN Refugee Agency The 1951 Refugee Convention The foundational international legal document establishing non-refoulement and refugee protections, born directly from the failures of 1939. 🔗 https://www.unhcr.org/1951-refugee-convention.html


💬 The Quote

15. George Santayana "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it."The Life of Reason, Vol. 1 (1905), Chapter XII: "Flux and Constancy in Human Nature" 🔗 https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/217853


📌 Citation Guide: Sources cover the legal and contemporary dimensions of Mullin v. Doe. Sources – document the historical record of the MS St. Louis. Sources – anchor the international legal and philosophical framework of the article. All links verified as of June 25, 2026.