
Campaign design team
By Vincent Cordova | Cordova 2028
May 7, 2026
GLOBAL PSYCHOPATHY EXPOSED: THIS IS NOT SAFETY — THIS IS GENOCIDE BY FIAT
By Vincent Cordova 5/7/2026
They tell you it’s about safety.
Safety from what? From the 771,000 of us sleeping on the concrete? From the 39 million of us drowning in poverty while we work two jobs? From the wages they’ve intentionally trapped below the cost of breathing? From the prescription opioids they flooded into our towns, then criminalized the escape when they cut us off? From the depression and isolation their machine manufactures daily?
You look around this country and you tell me — who is being kept safe?
Not the child separated from their mother and warehoused in a cage in El Salvador. Not the veteran dying on a sidewalk because “healthcare” is a luxury reserved for the donor class. Not the worker whose body is broken by 60-hour weeks and then denied the medicine that would let them live.
There is no safety in this system. There is only control.
The Mask Is Off: This Is a Terrorist Organization
When a group of people — across borders, across governments, across corporate boardrooms — coordinates to systematically harm human lives for power and profit, we have a word for that.
Terrorists.
They don’t wear ski masks. They wear suits. They hold press conferences. They sign trade deals. And they use the unbacked, limitless printing of fiat dollars to hold struggling nations at gunpoint, forcing them to cage their own kind.
This is not foreign policy. This is a global hostage situation.
Ask Yourself the Questions They Hope You Never Ask
- If they can print $7.5 million to pay the tiny island of Palau to swallow 75 deportees, why can’t they print the money to end homelessness in Los Angeles?
- If they can hand $6 million to El Salvador’s brutal CECOT prison — with a contract that explicitly banned healthcare and placed zero conditions on torture — what exactly are they paying for, if not state-sponsored suffering?
- If they can give $216 million in no-bid contracts to Grupo IAMSA in Mexico just to bus detained humans around, why is a single American dying because they can’t afford a vial of insulin?
These are not policy failures. These are choices.
Choices made by people who are not broken. They are psychopathic. They lack the neural wiring to feel your pain. They are sociopathic. They understand your pain perfectly and simply do not care. They have one religion, and it is secular power. And they will sacrifice every warm body on this earth to hold onto it.
The Fiat Dollar: A Weapon of Mass Manipulation
They print pieces of paper. Green rectangles backed by nothing but the threat of aircraft carriers. Then they point those green pieces at struggling countries and whisper:
“Take this money. Build the cages. Patrol the borders. Turn back your own species. Or we will crush your economy under tariffs, sanctions, and diplomatic isolation.”
And what happens? Countries that once knew what sovereignty meant are reduced to subcontractors in a global detention industry. Their leaders — greedy, corruptible — take the bribe and become the guards. They point guns at human beings who have done nothing but be born in the wrong place at the wrong time.
And you are supposed to call this “humanitarian.”
This is the ultimate colonization — not of land, but of conscience. It turns neighbor against neighbor. It makes a Mexican official lock up a Central American teenager for a paycheck funneled from Washington. It makes a Palauan leader sell his national dignity for a few million in aid. It builds a world where every migrant is a commodity, and every detention bed is a profit center for GEO Group and CoreCivic, whose stock prices soar with every cruel announcement.
One Life. One F*cking Life.
Stop and think about what they are stealing.
Every human being gets exactly one life. One chance to experience a sunrise. One chance to love someone so hard it rewires your soul. One chance to create something — a song, a business, a family, a meal, a moment of peace.
You get one.
And they have built a machine that sees that one life as a threat to be managed, a body to be caged, a number to be processed, or a resource to be sold. They do not see you. They see your labor when it’s useful, and your suffering when it’s profitable.
What do you call a system that robs entire populations of their one chance to live, to experience, to love, to create?
Genocidal.
They won’t call it that. They’ll dress it in legalese and diplomatic language. But the outcome is the same: the systematic destruction of human potential. The erasure of futures. The slow, bureaucratic killing of what makes us alive.
And if that wasn’t evil enough, look at what they do to the most vulnerable. The separation of children from parents — a policy designed to inflict maximum trauma as a deterrent. The rape of innocence. The sexual abuse that runs rampant in their detention centers because they don’t fund oversight, they fund punishment. They rape children of their safety. They rape entire communities of their hope. They rape the very concept of human dignity.
All for control.
And the ones pulling the strings — the Stephen Millers, the Tom Homans, the Klaus Schwabs of the world, the corporate executives at Palantir and Deloitte who rake in billions designing tracking systems to hunt human beings — they will never know the inside of a cage. They will never miss a meal. They will never hold their child in a cold cell as a border guard’s flashlight sweeps over their terrified face.
They are safe. Because they built the machine to grind you , not them.
A Warning to Every Nation: This Must End Now
To the leaders of Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Panama, Costa Rica, Honduras, Rwanda, Uganda, Palau, and every other country being approached with American fiat dollars and European “cooperation agreements”:
You are being used.
That money they’re printing? It’s not aid. It’s a leash. They are turning your sovereignty into a rental agreement, your people into jailers, and your land into a dumping ground for the human beings they don’t want to see on their own streets. They are making you complicit in a crime against our shared species.
You have one life too. One chance to stand on the right side of history. One chance to say, “We will not be your border guards. We will not cage our own kind. We will not sell our souls for your unbacked currency.”
Immigration is not a crime. It is a symptom of a failed global order, and you are being bribed to punish the victims rather than heal the disease.
If you take the money, you are signing your name on a genocide. Not with gas chambers, but with denial of healthcare, forced separation, indefinite detention, and the hollowing out of human souls in sterile, hidden camps.
This must end now.
Americans, Look Inward — The Enemy Is Not at the Border
Your enemy is not the desperate mother crossing the Rio Grande. Your enemy is not the exhausted Guatemalan teenager working the fields for less than a living wage. Your enemy is not the asylum seeker whose only crime was being born in a village torched by cartels.
Your enemy is the system that has made you so afraid, so broke, and so numb that you can look at those people and see a threat instead of a reflection.
The same system that forces your wages below the cost of rent is the one locking migrants in for-profit prisons. The same system that denies you a doctor’s visit while printing billions for war and deportation flights is the one that wrote a contract banning reproductive care for detained women. The same system that flooded your community with legal opioids and then left you to die in the street is the one that treats every human life as a spreadsheet calculation.
You are not in a safe nation. You are in an abusive relationship with a government that has weaponized your fear to steal your future.
This Is the Real Entry and Control Psychopathy
They enter nations under the pretext of “security cooperation.” They enter economies with printed money and “aid packages.” They enter your mind with 24/7 propaganda that frames desperate human beings as an invading horde.
Once they’re in, they control.
- Control borders to control labor.
- Control labor to suppress wages.
- Control wages to keep you too exhausted to resist.
- And when you resist, they control you with police, prisons, and the quiet erasure of your dignity.
This is not a government. This is an occupying force.
And the architects — the nameless, suited sociopaths who meet in Davos and D.C. and Brussels — do not love your country. They do not love your family. They do not love life. They love power. The secular, grinding, empty power of watching nations bow and populations kneel.
This is the truth they hope you never speak aloud.
It Has to End
Not in the next election cycle. Not when the polls shift. Now.
Every dollar spent detaining a migrant instead of housing the homeless is a declaration of war on humanity.
Every contract signed with a private prison company is a pact with death.
Every diplomat who shakes hands over a “third country” deportation deal has blood on their hands — and they know it.
One life. One chance to live, to experience, to love, to create.
And they are burning through millions of those chances daily, globally, with the cold precision of machines and the empty hearts of psychopaths.
We are not asking for reform. We are demanding an end to the machine.
To every country still taking the money: Stop. Now. You are not a subcontractor for genocide. You are a nation of human beings, and your first duty is to protect life, not cage it for a payday from Washington.
To every American: Wake up. The safety they sold you was a lie. The economy they gave you is a cage. The border they militarized is a mirror — and what it shows is an empire so terrified of its own people that it must export its cruelty to survive.
This is the raw truth.
This is the global psychopathy.
This is the machine we must dismantle — before it finishes consuming every last one of us.
The only question that matters: Can the person you vote for see your species as one? If they cannot, they will keep carving us apart until they reach you—and your children.
The current Administration has no empathy and the same faces in congress that is allowing this.
We must draw one red line: No institutional holders. No private equity. They took our homes, our health, our freedom, and our futures. If they get a seat at the table when we build the new system, our children will inherit the same nightmare. They stay out.
Here is the hard truth: Institutional holders and private equity firms must have no place in the new system. In 2025 alone, CoreCivic and GEO Group reported a combined 2billioninrevenue—a132 billioninrevenue — a 13165 per day for each human being held in detention, converting people into daily revenue units. Meanwhile, detained immigrants have been forced to work for a dollar a day or face solitary confinement. This is not an anomaly. Private profiteering from caged human beings traces back to the colonial era of the United States, and today the world's largest asset manager — Blackstone, with $1.242 trillion under management — has been financially involved with the prison industry. International pension funds in Denmark and university endowments, including from Ivy League schools, quietly seeded this industry from the start. The UN has explicitly called on the United States to stop using for-profit immigration detention centers. If we allow these same entities to build the new system with us, we will simply rebuild the old machinery of extraction — and our children will pay the price again.
Evidence Bank
1. Private Prison Profiteering: A Historical Continuity
The American carceral system was never purely a public function. One of the first full-length historical accounts shows how "the pursuit of private profits has shaped the American carceral system over time," tracing "a predatory for-profit system of punishment" all the way back to the colonial era, well before the post-Civil War convict leasing system that is more commonly cited. The modern private prison industry "was seeded quietly, often indirectly, by capital from university endowments," tracing its corporate form to the early 1980s when governments sought alternatives amid rising incarceration rates. Today, "almost every aspect of correctional control has been outsourced to private companies somewhere," and "the normalization of private equity firms and enormous correction corporations partnering with public carceral institutions has resulted in a failure of basic incarceration services".
2. The 2025–2026 Detention Revenue Explosion
The numbers are staggering. CoreCivic and GEO Group together reported **2billionincombinedrevenue∗∗—a132 billionincombinedrevenue ∗∗— a 13120.3 million to 244.7million[reference:4].GEOGroup′sprofits∗∗morethandoubled∗∗to244.7 million [ reference :4]. GEOGroup ′ sprofits ∗∗ morethandoubled ∗∗ to 31.8 million in the same period. Enthusiasm from investors was immediate: "The first day after the election, stock prices jumped 30%, 40%, for CoreCivic and GEO," according to Brett Burkhardt, associate professor of sociology at Oregon State University. ICE pays contractors roughly $165 per day for each person held in detention , turning human beings into daily revenue units.
3. The Forced Labor Lawsuits
Multiple lawsuits allege that private detention companies violate federal law banning forced labor as well as state minimum-wage laws "by coercing immigrant prisoners to work either for free or for just a dollar a day". GEO Group specifically "allegedly forced every person detained at the Aurora Immigration Processing Center to perform unpaid janitorial work, threatening that if they refuse, they will be sent to 'the hole'—solitary confinement". One of the largest private firms sought immunity from these legal challenges, arguing "it was acting on behalf of the federal government" — a claim that, if successful, would place private contractors above the law.
4. Academic Research on the Border Industrial Complex
Scholars have mapped what is now called the "border industrial complex" — "the origins of the border industrial complex, current American policies supported by private corporations regarding border infrastructure, and the impact of these policies on Central American asylum seekers". Research on Australia's parallel system argues that "the border industrial complex requires the alienation of asylum seekers from their own humanity for capital accumulation". The EU's approach, documented by Mark Akkerman, examines "the border industry, its financiers and human rights". And a comprehensive edited volume, The Migration Industry and the Commercialization of International Migration , demonstrates that "migration has become business, big business" where "a host of new business opportunities have emerged that capitalize on migrants' desires to move" as well as the "need to control movement across international borders".
5. The UN's Verdict on For-Profit Detention
UN human rights experts have explicitly called on the United States to "stop using privately-operated 'for-profit' immigration detention centers," urging the government to "stop outsourcing all detention facilities, including those that detain immigrants and asylum seekers". The UN's findings on Libya are even more damning: an investigation concluded that "EU funding is facilitating the commission of abuses against migrants in Libya, who are being systematically tortured and forced into sexual slavery". A 2026 UN report found that "migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers in Libya are enduring ruthless and systematic human rights violations, including killings, torture, sexual violence and trafficking". Amnesty International separately condemned "'horrific violations' being committed against migrants returned to Libya," including "sexual violence, against men, women and children" intercepted at sea and forcibly returned to EU-funded detention centers.
6. Institutional Investors: The Quiet Enablers
Behind the private prison operators sit the world's largest asset managers. The Vanguard Group is identified as a major investor in private prisons, while Blackstone Group — the world's largest alternative-asset manager with $1.242 trillion in assets under management — "was involved financially with Prison Realty" and has vast holdings across healthcare, education, and other critical industries. International pension funds are also implicated: a Danwatch investigation revealed that three major Danish pension funds — PKA, Velliv, and Lærernes Pension — "all have investments in the two largest players in the private prison industry in the US: CoreCivic and GEO Group". And university endowments, including from Ivy League institutions, helped seed the industry from the beginning.
Paid for by Vincent Cordova for President
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