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The Americans Seeking the American Dream—in Russia Oliver Wiseman

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On today’s Front Page from The Free Press: Why America doesn’t want a Momala. Eli Lake on a rap beef for the ages. Two more Columbia workers speak out. And more. 

But first, for our lead story, Peter Savodnik profiles the American men who, in search of the American dream, went east to Russia. 

It was probably January 2023 when Joseph Rose, a 49-year-old YouTuber from Tallahassee, Florida, realized God had sent him to Moscow.

“I do think it was God leading me to where I needed to be right now,” Rose told me over the phone. He was in his apartment, with recessed lighting and a sauna and an odd pirate theme, outside the center of the Russian capital. “I would say that Russia is becoming a bastion of Christianity and that America is becoming the opposite of this.” 

He added: “I was put in a spot where I could be used.”

He was alluding to his YouTube channel, which had made him something of a celebrity in Russia. “People recognize me on the street all the time.”

When people ask him what it’s like living in Russia, Rose said, “I often say it feels like our positive vision of 1950s America.”

Rose resides at the nexus of a growing movement of Americans chasing the American dream. In Russia.

I spoke to twenty American expats, all men, who have moved to Russia over the past four years. They told me they moved to Moscow or St. Petersburg or the wild east—Siberia—because they no longer believed the one person they once thought could save America—Donald Trump—could still save it. Continue reading. 

“I could have been killed in there”: Two more Columbia custodians tell The Free Press about the night that left them “traumatized.” 

Yesterday, The Free Press published an exclusive interview with Mario Torres, a facilities worker at Columbia who was photographed fighting off a pro-Palestinian protester as a mob invaded Hamilton Hall on April 30. A GoFundMe raising money for Torres’s potential legal fees surpassed the target of $18,000 in hours. The total has since reached more than $30,000. 

Now, two of Torres’s colleagues, Lester Wilson and Jesse Wynne, who were also working in the building with him that night, tell The Free Press they feel betrayed not only by the university—which their union is now suing on their behalf—but by the student protesters who put them in harm’s way.

“I’m not going back to that building ever,” Wilson told our Francesca Block.

He said he cries every time he thinks back to the incident. “I’m traumatized,” he said. “I could have been killed in there.” 

READ THE WHOLE STORY HERE.

An early front-runner for the most cringe-inducing moment of 2024 landed last week, when Drew Barrymore clasped Vice President Kamala Harris’s hands on her daytime talk show and pleaded for her to be “Momala of the country.” Barrymore’s studio audience may have applauded, but maybe that was just to break the awkward silence. Because Kamala isn’t at all popular. While some Democrats seem to think she should be the future of their party, the lesson of the last four years, writes Kat Rosenfield, is just the opposite: America doesn’t need Momala Harris. READ THAT BARN BURNER HERE.

Vladimir Putin was sworn in for his fifth six-year term as Russian president on Tuesday, one day after he’d ordered tactical nuclear weapons drills near Ukraine. (Reuters)

The administrative state is making us poorer, dumber, and sicker. Yuri Bezmenov (the nom de guerre, taken from a Soviet dissident, of a blogger we recommend) is ready to do battle against bureaucrats, armed with dozens of terrifying charts. (How To Subvert Subversion)

Americans have burned through their pandemic savings. Economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco estimate that excess savings peaked at $2.1 trillion in August 2021 and went to zero this March. That’s a lot of travel and cocktails. (FRBSF

Ukraine’s security service said it foiled a plot to assassinate Volodymyr Zelensky. Kiev said that two Ukrainian colonels responsible for protecting senior officials were working as part of a covert group of Russian agents. (CNN)

Joe Biden condemned the “ferocious surge in antisemitism in America and around the world” since October 7 in a speech yesterday. “Not 75 years later, but just seven and a half months later, and people are already forgetting. . . that Hamas unleashed this terror, that it was Hamas that brutalized Israelis, that it was Hamas that took and continues to hold hostages.” (AP)

Meanwhile, the Biden administration is reportedly holding up shipments of Boeing-made precision bombs to “send a political message to Israel.” (Politico

A TikTok ban could be an “extinction-level event” for the creator economy, warns NPR. As if they’re an endangered species. We could also just have a creator economy not controlled by the Chinese Communist Party. (NPR)

Stormy Daniels took to the witness stand Tuesday to answer questions about her alleged sexual encounter with Donald Trump in 2006. She said she initially declined an invitation to have dinner with Trump but changed her mind because it would “make a great story.” She added, “What could possibly go wrong.” (NBC News

New York governor Kathy Hochul said that black kids in the Bronx don’t know what the word computer means. It seems while kids are the future—they also definitely know about computers—patronizing politicians are the never-ending present. (New York Post)

Ross Douthat assigns college kids a reading list to widen the ideological lens. It includes C.S. Lewis, Neil Postman, and Robert Putnam. What would you add to the list? (New York Times)

Readers, this was supposed to be the spot in The Front Page where I urge you to buy tickets for our upcoming debate in San Francisco on whether criminal justice reform has made our cities unsafe. There’s a problem, though: we’re already sold out. For those who missed out, let’s make this a teachable moment. Paid subscribers get access to a 24-hour presale, so subscribe today to avoid disappointment when we announce our next debate. Paid subscribers also get to watch the recording of the debate before everyone else. (You can watch our last debate, on immigration, here.) 

As for those of you who have tickets: see you there! What merch will you be rocking on debate night? And why is the answer our brand-new TGIF socks

→ What the Drake vs. Kendrick Lamar beef is all about: After it was born in the Bronx 50 years ago, hip-hop matured into one of our country’s greatest cultural exports, but for the last decade or so, the art form has been dominated by a Canadian child actor obsessed with his feelings.

I’m speaking of Aubrey Graham, better known as Drake, who has sold 188 million singles since he released his first album in 2010—more than any artist in the history of music, let alone rap.

But there’s an American artist who’s long had doubts about Drake’s commercial success. Kendrick Lamar is the closest thing rap has to a poet laureate—he won the Pulitzer Prize in 2018, for God’s sake. And for the last six weeks, he’s been waging a war on Drake that might just destroy the Canadian mogul’s reputation.

It all began when Lamar released the song “Like That” on March 26. On it, Lamar raps: Your best work is a light pack / N***a, Prince outlived Mike Jack. (In this analogy, Kendrick is Prince and Drake is the late, troubled King of Pop.)

No rapper would let a provocation like that slide. Drake responded with the song “Push Ups,” which was leaked online April 13, rapping: Big difference between Mike then and Mike now

Since then, the two rappers have been pelting each other with diss tracks: Drake used AI to co-opt the voice of Kendrick’s hero Tupac Shakur to attack his rival; Kendrick told the world that Drake uses Ozempic and has had plastic surgery; Drake mocked Kendrick for having a white girlfriend (hit vanilla cream to help out with your self-esteem); then, on May 3, Kendrick delivered his most brutal hit yet. 

On “Not Like Us,” Kendrick eviscerates his rival, accusing him of going after young girls and calling him a “certified pedophile.” Everyone seems to agree that this fight is a knockout, with Lamar the winner. 

Drake and Lamar used to be friends—they last collaborated 12 years ago—but since then, their “creative differences” have only grown. Rumor has it Kendrick thinks Drake is more pop star than real rapper, while Drake believes Kendrick’s simply jealous he can do both. And though Drake has sold more units than Kendrick, he will never be considered a visionary. 

The language is new, but the tension is age-old: it’s all about commercial success vs. artistic cred. 

I, for one, am with my countryman, Kendrick Lamar. At a moment when American prestige and power are in decline everywhere from the NBA to the South China Sea, it’s glorious to watch an American rapper take down this hip-hop usurper in Toronto. God bless the USA. —Eli Lake 

→ The Times’ missing story: The Pulitzer Prize winners were announced this week, and the staff of The New York Times won the international reporting award for the paper’s “wide-ranging and revelatory coverage of Hamas’ lethal attack in southern Israel on October 7, Israel’s intelligence failures, and the Israeli military’s sweeping, deadly response in Gaza.” We couldn’t help but notice the most impactful piece of journalism published by the Times in relation to October 7—its “Screams Without Words” investigation into Hamas’s use of mass rape as a weapon of war—was missing from the list of the Times’ winning stories. 

As The Free Press has reported, the story has been attacked by left-wing outlets and the subject of a big internal fight at the paper in the months since its publication. Not that all that scrutiny has turned up any meaningful, correction-worthy errors in the story. Newspapers choose what stories they submit to each category, so why did the Times not include this in their submission? Maybe because the Times top brass thought the Pulitzer judges would swerve a controversial story, or maybe because they want to avoid angering newsroom radicals who seem so determined to defend Hamas against accusations of weaponized sexual violence. 

Michael recommends Rumpole of the Bailey: It may sound strange to recommend a television series that began in 1978 and ended in 1992, but in my opinion, it is the best TV program ever made. The main character is an English barrister, defending his (usually underdog) clients with all his soul. He is locked in an unhappy marriage and is alienated from his son. 

Sounds depressing, doesn’t it? No! It is one of the most amusing and entertaining series ever screened. Just about every episode raises at least two distinct genuine moral issues, which are dealt with in a realistic way, without overdramatization, while presenting all sides. The lead actor, Leo McKern, was a genius, and the supporting cast is superb.

Bill recommends McClard’s, a restaurant in Hot Springs, Arkansas: Bill Clinton knew where to go for barbecue. McClard’s has been serving barbecue for nine decades. When young Billy first started going there, you could give the carhop a nickel, she’d play your song on the jukebox, and you could hear it on your car radio. Today, the menu has expanded to include the Tamale Spread, a couple of homemade hot tamales topped with corn chips, pork and beans, chopped barbecue beef, onions, cheddar cheese and of course, McClard’s signature vinegar-based sauce. I expect they’ll be around for at least another 90 years or so. 

What would you recommend to fellow Free Pressers? Let us know at thefrontpage@thefp.com

Oliver Wiseman is a writer and editor for The Free Press. Follow him on X @ollywiseman

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Portland: Future Home of Law and Order? Olivia Reingold

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Protesters watch a structure fire, set following the police shooting of a homeless man on April 17, 2021 in Portland, Oregon. (Photo by Nathan Howard/Getty Images)

Since launching his campaign to replace Portland’s progressive district attorney last year, Nathan Vasquez says he’s knocked on nearly 20,000 doors to make his pitch. “Hi, I’m running for District Attorney for Multnomah County,” he usually begins his spiel. “The last four years haven’t gone well, but I have a vision to get us back on track.”

What he’s talking about are the four rocky years that have gripped Portland since the summer of racial reckoning in 2020. After video footage of George Floyd’s death spread like wildfire, Portland—one of the whitest cities in America—was roiled by protests for more than a hundred days. In June of that year, only a month after Floyd’s death, the city council voted to strip the city’s police department of $15 million in funding and cut 84 positions, representing 8 percent of its officers

In the subsequent years, the homicide rate tripled, car theft soared, and much of downtown was overtaken by open-air drug use. The murder rate has since dropped but violent crime overall remains up 17 percent from 2019 levels. That is why Vasquez, a senior prosecutor for Multnomah County, is challenging his own boss—Mike Schmidt, a registered Democrat who ran on a “bold, progressive vision” to confront “historical and systemic racism.” To Vasquez, a registered independent, Schmidt’s tenure has been a flop—and he says the people of Portland agree.

“A line I hear in Portland on an everyday basis is that people tell me, ‘I’m very progressive, or I’m very liberal, but things have gone too far.’ ”

On Tuesday, voters will decide if they agree with that statement. In 2020, voters elected Schmidt with a nearly 77 percent landslide win. Now, polls show Vasquez leading Schmidt by 19 points when voters were “presented with basic information about the two candidates.” When they face off in Portland’s nonpartisan primary, any candidate that garners more than fifty percent of the vote will win the office. 

“What I believe is that it will be decided next Tuesday,” says Vasquez, who was previously registered as a Republican until he found himself “disgusted” with former president Donald Trump. 

Other progressive district attorneys have already gotten the axe. In 2022, halfway through his term, San Franciscans overwhelmingly voted to recall Chesa Boudin, the former district attorney, who campaigned on a promise to “dismantle our racist system of mass incarceration.” Now, Pamela Price, the district attorney in nearby Alameda County, is facing a recall election this November. The move to recall Price, who campaigned with the slogan “justice with compassion,” comes as violent crime is on the rise in Oakland, where roughly one out of every thirty residents has been the victim of car theft. 

Nathan Vasquez: “A lot of people still want social justice. . . But what they also want is a safe community.” (Courtesy Nathan Vasquez)

Some of their peers have survived the heat, including José Garza, the district attorney in Travis County, who won his March primary even though the homicide rate is still above pre-pandemic levels. Meanwhile, Larry Krasner, a George Soros–backed progressive, is still in office in Philadelphia despite having been impeached by Republicans in the state house (he’s now awaiting his trial in the Senate).

Still, the tides seem to be turning. 

A growing share of Americans say crime is one of their top issues heading into this year’s presidential election. In 2021, when President Joe Biden took office, 47 percent of Americans said crime “should be a top priority” for his administration. Now, 58 percent of voters say that crime “should be a top priority for the president.” And the voters seeking stronger law and order are not necessarily the people you’d expect, says Vasquez. 

When I asked him if any of his supporters are the same Portlanders who marched in the streets in 2020, demanding $50 million in cuts to the city’s police department, he said “certainly.”

“A lot of people still want social justice, and that’s a wonderful part of what we’re trying to do,” he added. “But what they also want is a safe community.” 

Olivia Reingold is a writer for The Free Press. Read her piece “Addiction Activists Say They’re ‘Reducing Harm’ in Philly. Locals Say They’re Causing It” and follow her on X @Olivia_Reingold.

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Why Some U.S. Border Agents Are Contemplating Suicide Joe Nocera

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Former Customs and Border Protection Chief Patrol agent Chris Clem near the U.S.-Mexico border in Yuma, Arizona, on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024. On the left is wall constructed under the Biden administration and on the right is wall constructed under the Trump administration (Caitlin O’Hara for The Free Press)

Brian, a U.S. Border Patrol agent who works along the south Texas border, is haunted by something that happened a few years ago. A man—a Mexican cartel member, he believes—emerged from the banks of the Rio Grande carrying two toddlers. The children, a boy and a girl, were wearing nothing but diapers. The man darted across the border, dropped the children fifty feet away, and then raced back into the river to Mexico. 

“I picked up these toddlers and looked fifty yards south,” said Brian, a ten–year veteran of the agency, who, like all agents we spoke to for this story, insisted on using a pseudonym. That’s when he saw six adult migrants running across the border as fast as they could. The children, he realized, had been a decoy. “They use these kids to distract us so they can run their illegals up in other places,” he said. As he helped the children to safety, he was outraged. “When I couldn’t pursue those men, I felt like I was letting the American people down.” 

Another veteran agent said he’s witnessed the same problem on his watch—and much worse. “We regularly see things that people should never see, like rotting human remains, abuse of every kind, babies and kids dying or dead,” he told The Free Press

“Do you know what that does to you over time?” he asked. “You have to shut down a part of yourself to keep going.” 

Last summer, the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general, Joseph V. Cuffari, reported that the number of people who eluded capture—also known as “gotaways”—rose over 300 percent from 2019 to 2022, reaching more than 600,000. Many of the gotaways are people seeking a better life. But border officials acknowledge that many others are fentanyl smugglers, human traffickers, or convicted criminals. According to immigration officials, agents intercept just 5–10 percent of the drugs that cross the southwest border. 

Now, three-plus years into the worst border crisis in American history, the men and women of the Border Patrol are facing a crisis of their own. By all accounts, those who work along the southern border are a demoralized group. Unable to go after the “bad guys” because they are overwhelmed by the sheer number of migrants, and feeling abandoned by the Biden administration, many agents “just get kind of numb,” said Chris Clem, a twenty-seven-year veteran who retired as chief border agent of the Yuma, Arizona, sector last year.

“Even if my spidey senses go off, I have to ask myself, how much time can I devote to this?” said Clem. “Because I’ve got 200 more people in line I have to process.” (Caitlin O’Hara for The Free Press)

“We all knew under this administration there’d be a change,” he said. “We expect that every time there’s a political change. But when it turned out that the job became nothing more than processing and releasing these people, that was very hard to take.”

Before the crisis, processing migrants was secondary to “working the line,” as agents call patrolling the border. Today, because of the sheer numbers of people coming into the country, there is little time for anything else beyond processing.

“It feels like a bait and switch,” said Mark, a retired agent who remains in federal law enforcement and works closely with his former colleagues. “We are meant to serve a law enforcement purpose. That’s what we signed up for and are trained for. But suddenly, we’re now expected to act as a humanitarian relief agency, which requires an entirely different set of skills, expectations, resources, and responsibilities. . . ones that most of us don’t have.”

Even when agents spot something suspicious, there is little they can do. “Even if my spidey senses go off, I have to ask myself, how much time can I devote to this?” said Clem. “Because I’ve got 200 more people in line I have to process. They even took away our ability to use DNA testing, so we no longer have the resources to see whether or not we’re processing a real family unit.

“A lot of agents are just trying to go to work and survive,” Clem continued. “And that’s not where you want to be when you’re in law enforcement.” 

A U.S. Border Patrol agent watches over immigrants awaiting transport for further processing on March 7, 2024, in Campo, California. (John Moore via Getty)

This accumulation of the frustrations these agents describe has led to a mental health crisis in their ranks. In 2022, there were fourteen suicides among the Border Patrol’s 25,000 agents—nearly twice the number of suicides in 2020, and three times that of 2014. That’s more than double the percentage of suicides among all law enforcement agencies. And, according to several studies, agents suffer from poorer mental health than police officers and the general population.

As a result of the crisis, several congresspeople have introduced bills to fund suicide prevention programs for border guards. In 2021, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the federal agency that oversees the agents, brought in Dr. Kent Corso, a suicidologist. He hosts a series of podcasts about suicide prevention posted on the CBP website, among other services. (Corso did not respond to several emails from The Free Press.)

But according to seven Border Patrol sources who spoke to The Free Press, most agents are unwilling to tell their superiors they are depressed or having suicidal thoughts, out of fear it will damage their careers. According to Brandon Judd, the president of the National Border Patrol Council, a union that represents the majority of Border Patrol agents, those who acknowledge mental health problems are usually reassigned to desk duty, which not only stigmatizes them but results in a substantial pay cut, thanks to the loss of overtime. When The Free Press asked Judd why struggling agents don’t reach out for help, he replied rhetorically, “Why would you?”

John Fitzpatrick, a former associate chief who spent nearly thirty years in the Border Patrol, said that “many agents are sympathetic with migrants for making the journey.” One agent told The Free Press that he sometimes finds himself spending time helping mothers who have crossed the border with infants. “I know how to make formula because I raised two kids. . . I know how exhausted that mother is.” He said he’ll often tell the mothers he meets, “ ‘Mama, lay down. I’ll feed your kids.’ ” 

But while the agent is helping that mother, dangerous people are infiltrating the country. “There are serious, hardened criminals—MS-13 gang members, potential terrorists, and simply people who have extensive criminal histories,” said Fitzpatrick. “There’s really nothing stopping them from coming here at this point.”

Two men scale the cyclone fence installed by the Texas National Guard as hundreds of migrants queue up along the border wall dividing Mexico and the United States, awaiting processing by the Border Patrol in hopes of receiving asylum on March 15, 2024, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. (David Peinado via Getty Images)

Juan joined the U.S. Border Patrol almost four years ago, shortly before Joe Biden became president. In his early thirties, he was assigned to a post along the Rio Grande in Texas.

He arrived expecting to do the job he had been trained to do: protect America from criminals and potential criminals. But with so many migrants crossing the border—a staggering 2.5 million encounters in 2023 alone—it hasn’t turned out that way.

Instead, he spends his days processing migrants who have crossed the river—sometimes in groups of one hundred or more. “We call them ‘give-ups’ because when they cross the border they don’t try to evade us. They just give themselves up,” he told The Free Press

“When I was out there in the dark, and I came upon a family of five—true story—and they started hugging me because they were abandoned by their smuggler,” Juan said. “They were eaten up by mosquitoes, and they hadn’t eaten in three days, and they’d been drinking river water—you know, that’s the humanitarian aspect. I gave them my lunch, and then I personally brought them to the station so that mom, dad, and three kids with them could all get sandwiches and water.”

The Biden administration’s policy has been to release migrants into the U.S. so long as they say they have “credible fear” of returning to their native countries. The migrants have all been instructed to use the phrase—and the agents feel hamstrung when they hear it. In December 2023, for example, over 75 percent of the nearly 250,000 migrants who illegally crossed the border were released into the U.S. with nothing more than a notice to appear at some future date in immigration court. Immigration courts are currently backlogged with more than 3 million pending cases.

Asylum seekers rush to be processed by border patrol agents at an improvised camp near the U.S.-Mexico border in eastern Jacumba, California, on February 2, 2024. (Guillermo Arias via Getty Images)

Juan said he has seen and heard terrible things, including stories of rape almost daily. “I had to sit there and listen to a 13-year-old girl from El Salvador tell me how she’d been raped twice by her smuggler. She was traveling with her 9-year-old brother, and the smuggler said he would hurt the boy if she didn’t cooperate. So she let him do what he wanted.” 

Law enforcement officers have long been identified as an at-risk group for mental health issues, including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, and substance abuse. More recently, they have also been identified as a group at risk of what psychologists call “moral distress” and “moral injury”—conditions that result when people are forced to compromise their most deeply held values and beliefs or when they feel those values and beliefs are violated or betrayed. Border Patrol agents may be uniquely at risk for all these conditions. 

Indeed, every agent The Free Press spoke to said they believed the administration is not interested in protecting the border. Several said the Biden administration had forced them to make impossible choices, calling its treatment of them a betrayal.

Mark, the former agent, put it this way: “How would you feel when you have a guy in front of you, demanding asylum, holding his young daughter’s hand, smiling at you, and lying to your face, using the same line he’s been coached what to say to get into the country, even though his rap sheet shows he was arrested for sexual abuse of minors, including the young girl? If you separate the child, she’ll scream and be traumatized. If you keep them together, then you run the very high risk that she’ll be sexually traumatized again. You tell me, which trauma is the lesser evil?”

Judd, the union president, said, “We recognize when you sign up for law enforcement that you’re going to be thrust into situations that can be very, very stressful. You’re willing to accept that stress if you feel like you’re accomplishing something, and right now, there is no sense of accomplishment.” 

Mayra Cantu poses for a portrait near the Rio Grande on Tuesday, May 14, 2024, in Roma, Texas. (Sergio Flores for The Free Press)

Mayra Cantu, 44, is married to a Border Patrol agent who she declines to name. They live with their three children in Edinburg, Texas, a half-hour from the border, which is also the headquarters of the Rio Grande Valley Sector, where some 3,500 agents patrol 17,000 square miles. With Border Patrol agents barred from speaking to journalists, she has taken it upon herself to become their voice, talking to reporters and, last September, testifying before Congress.

“We’ve always lived in border towns,” she said during a Zoom call with The Free Press. “We’ve always lived around illegals. My husband joined the Border Patrol because he wanted to be sure that the job was getting done, that our town and our families were being protected.”

During the first year of the Biden presidency, she said, her husband was in a daze—hardly believing that, as he saw it, Border Patrol agents couldn’t do their job anymore. “These men took an oath, which they took very seriously. They were being forced to betray that oath,” she said. Her husband, she added, “would come home from work ‘a blank page.’ He stopped talking to me. I couldn’t read him. There were a lot of very quiet days.”

As time progressed, he would erupt in anger over the littlest things—one of the kids spilling a glass of water, say. “It was just rage. I started to question myself. Am I doing something wrong? Are the kids doing something wrong? We were all walking on eggshells. It was hurting our marriage.” Sometimes at night, he would scream out. “I realized he was reliving the trauma of work in his sleep.”

In his anger and dismay, Cantu’s husband began spending hours at the computer at night researching the border crisis—“to prove that what the White House was saying was wrong.” In the fall of 2021, several agents on horseback were accused of whipping some Haitian migrants. Biden vowed to make the agents “pay” for their behavior. This infuriated many agents, who knew the accusation was unfounded and felt stabbed in the back by the president. Sure enough, the following spring, the agents were cleared of criminal wrongdoing by the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general. No apology ever came from the administration.

A photo of Mayra Cantu and her husband at their home on Tuesday, May 14, 2024, in Edinburg, Texas. Cantu said that her husband “would come home from work ‘a blank page.’ He stopped talking to me. I couldn’t read him. There were a lot of very quiet days.” (Sergio Flores for The Free Press)

For Cantu, the possibility of suicide is ever-present. In 2022, one of her husband’s friends took his own life; afterward, her husband recalled that the guy had wanted to talk after his shift ended but he hadn’t had time—and the subsequent guilt was enormous. Last summer, she said, another friend, in the middle of a divorce, was on the brink of suicide, but was saved by a group of agents and their wives who gave him what he didn’t have at work: a feeling of self-worth. “Thankfully, we were able to talk to him and console him and surround him with community to make sure people were checking up on him. And I can say now he’s in a way better place.” 

Mayra Cantu shows a medal for bravery that was awarded to her husband at their home on Tuesday, May 14, 2024 in Edinburg, Texas. (Sergio Flores for The Free Press)

In a lengthy statement to The Free Press, a spokesman for the agency said it was working to get more agents back on the line, “thanks to innovation and efficiencies.” He said that “maintaining morale supporting frontline personnel, and ensuring our resilient workforce has the resources available to maintain a healthy work-life balance is a top priority for CBP leadership.”

But agents patrolling the southern border told The Free Press that help has yet to arrive. In the meantime, agents are doing all they can to cope with the mental and moral onslaught. 

“I’ve talked to other agents about this,” Brian said. “Like, how do you continue to do your job without saying, you know, ‘Fuck it. I don’t want to do this anymore.’ And I’ve been told you just have to drive forward and have resilience.”

Michele DeMarco is an award-winning mental health writer, therapist, and trauma researcher. She is the author of Holding Onto Air: The Art and Science of Building a Resilient Spirit and writes the blog Soul Console at PsychologyToday.com. Joe Nocera is a Free Press columnist. Madeleine Rowley contributed reporting to this article.

Read Peter Savodnik’s piece, “A Report from the Southern Border: ‘We Want Biden to Win.’ ” And become a Free Press subscriber today:

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Things Worth Remembering: The Creator of Peter Pan on How to Grow Up Douglas Murray

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Actress Dame Ellen Terry and novelist Sir J.M. Barrie sit together in their caps and gowns at St. Andrews University, May 1922. (Photo by © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)

Welcome to Douglas Murray’s column, Things Worth Remembering, in which he presents great speeches from famous orators we should commit to heart. To listen to Douglas recite a passage from J.M. Barrie’s 1922 commencement address on courage, scroll to the end of this piece.

This is the time of year for the commencement address, a notoriously difficult speech to pull off without inducing a collective smirk or eye roll. One commencement address that managed to avoid that fate took place on May 3, 1922, and it was given by the Scottish author and playwright J.M. Barrie—best known for having given us Peter Pan. 

I find Barrie a fascinating, if strange, figure. (He had, to say the least, a complicated relationship with the people that he based his characters on.) 

In Peter Pan—the mischievous little boy who could fly and have all kinds of adventures in magical lands and somehow never grow up—he created an archetype (first in the 1904 play, and then in the 1911 novel) that has coursed through the culture ever since. 

Perhaps it was inevitable that the idea of the boy who never grows out of boyhood would gain special poignancy for audiences around the world after the tragedy of World War I, in which an entire generation of young men was wiped out. 

Certainly, this was something that Barrie had already spent much time dwelling on. But when he arrived at St. Andrews, not far from Edinburgh, to give some life advice to the students growing up in the aftermath of the disaster, he knew that he needed to inspire them. And he did so in his speech—titled simply “Courage.”


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