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Episode 220: The Power of Thought-Terminating Bad Guy Labels

"American Extremists Aiding Radicals Across Border," trumpeted the Detroit Free Press in 1919. "707 Illegal Aliens Arrested in Checkpoint Crackdown," reported the Los Angeles Times in 1987. "87 Bronx gang members responsible for nine years of murders and drug-dealing charged in largest takedown in NYC history," announced the New York Daily News in 2016. "'Top secret' Hamas documents show that terrorists intentionally targeted elementary schools and a youth center," claimed NBC News in 2023. 

Each of these headlines includes a label for a certain type of Bad Guy. Whether it’s the "Extremist," the "Illegal Alien," the "Gang Member," or the "Terrorist," these terms—and their related cousins—seek to exceptionalize the alleged transgressions of their targets, separate them from both the law and history and dehumanize them, all while priming media audiences for crueler laws, harsher policing, longer incarceration and sometimes even extrajudicial punishment. The terms, of course, don’t have clear, universally accepted definitions—nor are they supposed to—their use is often heavily racialized and, by their very nature, subject to the whims and ideologies of the Security State and the media doing its bidding. 

What effects, then, do these Bad Guy Labels have on public perceptions? How do they serve to foreclose critical thinking about who is deemed inside the bounds of due process and humanization and who is categorically an other in urgent need of disappearing and punishment?

On this episode, we examine four thought-terminating Bad Guy labels, analyze their origins, why they rose to prominence and explain how they are selectively evoked in order to turn off people’s brains and open up space for quick and cruel state violence.

Our guest is attorney and author Alec Karakatsanis.

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Guest

Alec Karakatsanis (@equalityAlec) is a public defender and founder of Civil Rights Corps. He writes the Copaganda Newsletter and is the author of Usual Cruelty: The Complicity of Lawyers in the Criminal Injustice System (The New Press, 2019). His new book, Copaganda: How Police and the Media Manipulate Our News (The New Press, 2025) was published this month.

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Show Notes

News Literacy Edition: Covering extremism

Kelly McBride | February 20, 2025 | NPR

Media Hype Set Up Tren de Aragua to Serve as Trump’s New Bogeyman

Belén Fernández | January 25, 2025 | FAIR

CBS Staffers Escalate Criticism of Tony Dokoupil's Hostility on Palestine

Justin Baragona | October 9, 2024 | Zeteo

Leaked NYT Gaza Memo Tells Journalists to Avoid Words “Genocide,” “Ethnic Cleansing,” and “Occupied Territory”

Jeremy Scahill and Ryan Grim | April 15, 2024 | The Intercept

Retire the Word "Terrorism"

Hamilton Nolan | October 9, 2023 | How Things Work

On Terrorists and Freedom Fighters

Khaled A. Beydoun | October 20, 2022 | Harvard Law Review

Who is a terrorist, actually?

Daniel L. Byman | September 22, 2020 | Brookings

Dozens Condemned by Media as ‘Gang Members’ Not Actually Gang Members, Study Confirms

Adam Johnson | April 26, 2019 | FAIR

The Largest Gang Raid in NYC History Swept Up Dozens of Young People Who Weren’t in Gangs

Alice Speri and Stephanie Tangkilisan | April 25, 2019 | The Intercept

How News Media Talk About Terrorism: What the Evidence Shows

Erin M. Kearns and Amarnath Amarasingam | April 5, 2019 | Just Security

The FBI Won’t Hand Over Its Surveillance Records on ‘Black Identity Extremists,’ so We’re Suing

Nusrat Choudhury and Malkia Cyril | March 21, 2019 | ACLU

Terrorism: a very brief history

Mats Fridlund | March 8, 2019 | The Conversation

Terrorists Are Always Muslim but Never White: At the Intersection of Critical Race Theory and Propaganda

Caroline Mala Corbin | 2017 | Fordham Law Review

The Delegitimizing Power of the ‘Terrorism’ Label

Anais Chagankerian | July 18, 2013 | E-International Relations

The Times Shifts on ‘Illegal Immigrant,’ but Doesn’t Ban the Use

Christine Haughney | April 23, 2013 | The New York Times

How ‘‘undocumented workers’’ and ‘‘illegal aliens’’ affect prejudice toward Mexican immigrants

Matthew R. Pearson | 2010 | Social Influence

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Transcript

For a full transcript of this episode, go here. You can also find transcripts of past episodes, live shows, Beg-a-Thons, Interviews and News Briefs here.

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Credits

Senior Producer: Florence Barrau-Adams

Producer: Julianne Tveten

Production Assistant: Trendel Lightburn

Newsletter: Marco Cartolano

Music: Grandaddy

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Episode 220: The Power of Thought-Terminating Bad Guy Labels

Comments

I just have to say, the guest's comments around 1:05:00 regarding the driving forces behind, "why are these people coming here? What are the actions of the United States over the past 50, 60, 70 years that may be influencing this movement?" hit the nail on the head. You have a history of US military intervention throughout Central and South America in particular that makes the rhetoric around migrants, immigration, and an entire set of ethnic groups infuriating to deal with.

Gregory Sheppard


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