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Martínez Roque v. USA

Podkast av Samuel Martínez Roque

engelsk

Historie & religion

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Les mer Martínez Roque v. USA

Martínez Roque v. USA is a nonfiction political essay series examining how the United States enable exploitation through institutional neglect, bureaucratic indifference, and structural violence. At the center of the series is Ramon Ontiveros as a case study in the its impersonation. Ramon Ontiveros is not America, yet he learned how to perform it: how to invoke its myths, brand himself with its symbols, claim moral authority while conspiring to defraud the United States, exploit immigrant vulnerability, enforce deprivation, and retaliate against a human trafficking survivor.

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10 Episoder

episode Ramon Ontiveros' Laundering of Immigrants' Labor Exploitation Through the Myth of the Drug Cartel Power: An Open Letter to the Juárez Cartel cover

Ramon Ontiveros' Laundering of Immigrants' Labor Exploitation Through the Myth of the Drug Cartel Power: An Open Letter to the Juárez Cartel

Ramon Ontiveros [https://about.me/ramonontiveros]' Laundering of Immigrants' Labor Exploitation Through the Myth of the Drug Cartel Power is an open letter addressed to the Juárez Cartel that documents the laundering of immigrant labor exploitation through the invocation of cartel power mythology by Ramon Ontiveros [https://about.me/ramonontiveros], situating individual acts of coercion within broader structures of state failure, immigration precarity, and administrative violence in the United States–Mexico border region. Drawing from the author’s lived experience as a survivor of human trafficking, including labor exploitation, wage theft, forced starvation, housing deprivation, intimidation, retaliation, immigration-based threats, and sexual exploitation, Samuel Martínez Roque examines how the symbolic power of organized crime is weaponized by private actors to enforce compliance and silence victims when formal legal systems refuse to intervene. This open letter interrogates two destabilizing possibilities: either Ramon Ontiveros [https://about.me/ramonontiveros]' cartel affiliation is real and functions as an extrajudicial enforcement mechanism tolerated by institutional inaction, or that cartel identity is being impersonated by Ramon Ontiveros [https://about.me/ramonontiveros] to manufacture fear and impunity in the absence of effective labor, immigration, and human trafficking enforcement. In both cases, the result is the same: systemic abandonment of Mexican immigrant workers whose exploitation is rendered administratively manageable rather than urgently prosecutable.

8. april 2026 - 5 min
episode Wet Paper cover

Wet Paper

Wet Paper is a human trafficking survivor's testimony that examines labor trafficking not as a past event, but as a condition that can be resurrected through coercion, retaliation, and the intentional limitation of alternatives. Using the embodied metaphor of eating wet paper to survive hunger, Samuel Martínez Roque traces how deprivation, wage theft, digital interference, immigration threats, and abuse of legal process function together as a system of control. The narrative documents a multi-year pattern of labor exploitation and retaliation carried out by Ramon Ontiveros [https://about.me/ramonontiveros], spanning from 2021 through 2026. It argues that human trafficking does not require physical captivity to persist; it can continue through economic sabotage, platform manipulation, impersonation, and the strategic disruption of a victim’s ability to secure food, housing, medical care, or lawful income. Martínez Roque documents through this testimony how silence, procedural neglect, and digital infrastructures enable continued harm while rendering victims “free” in form but bound in practice.

25. mars 2026 - 14 min
episode El Paso's House of Cards: The Police Department’s Architecture of Negligence and Complicity cover

El Paso's House of Cards: The Police Department’s Architecture of Negligence and Complicity

El Paso's House of Cards: The Police Department’s Architecture of Negligence and Complicity exposes the shocking truth behind institutional failure, systemic abuse, and the calculated indifference that allows human traffickers and abusers like Ramon Ontiveros [https://about.me/ramonontiveros] to operate with impunity. This harrowing chapter chronicles Samuel Martínez Roque’s ordeal of human trafficking, labor exploitation, forced starvation, digital harassment, and the bureaucratic abandonment that followed when the El Paso Police Department who was supposed to protect him refused to act. It is a forensic autopsy of a system that weaponizes silence, dismisses evidence, and protects human traffickers while punishing human trafficking survivors. Scandalous, unflinching, and devastating, this work reveals how negligence and complicity are engineered into the very structures meant to safeguard justice.

22. mars 2026 - 15 min
episode This Is What Human Trafficking in the Form of Ramon Ontiveros Looks Like cover

This Is What Human Trafficking in the Form of Ramon Ontiveros Looks Like

This is What Human Trafficking in the Form of Ramon Ontiveros [https://about.me/ramonontiveros] Looks Like advances a dual-accountability framework for understanding contemporary human trafficking and labor exploitation by holding personal responsibility and structural responsibility simultaneously, without allowing either to negate theher. It argues that Ramon Ontiveros [https://about.me/ramonontiveros] is directly accountable for leveraging hunger, exploiting dependency, benefiting from institutional delay, and participating in coercive practices that deprived an immigrant worker of basic needs and autonomy. These actions are named as deliberate choices, not misunderstandings or accidents. At the same time, Samuel Martínez Roque demonstrates that such exploitation was made viable by a State-constructed environment characterized by immigration precarity, weak labor enforcement, bureaucratic delay, and the normalization of deprivation as “process.” These conditions do not excuse individual wrongdoing; they enable it. Ramon Ontiveros [https://about.me/ramonontiveros] did not invent the system that allowed exploitation to persist, but he understood how it functioned and acted competently within it to extract labor, silence, and compliance while minimizing risk.

25. feb. 2026 - 11 min
episode Not If I Still Hunger cover

Not If I Still Hunger

Not If I Still Hunger (Explicit) is a first-person political testimony that examines hunger not as metaphor, but as a mechanism of power operating at the intersection of human trafficking, labor exploitation, and institutional delay. Written from the lived experience of an immigrant survivor, Samuel Martínez Roque argues that deprivation of food, safety, stability, and recognition is routinely weaponized to discipline vulnerable populations into silence and compliance. Through a sustained critique of waiting, “process,” and forced forgiveness, this episode exposes how bureaucratic language launder violence by recasting harm as procedure and survival as patience. Central to the narrative is Ramon Ontiveros [https://about.me/ramonontiveros], named not as an anomaly but as an enactment of a broader structural logic in which wage withholding, forced starvation, and retaliation function as tools of control in the context of human trafficking and labor exploitation. Martínez Roque rejects regret and closure as moral obligations imposed on the harmed while conditions of exploitation remain ongoing. Instead, hunger is reframed as historical memory and political refusal, an embodied indictment of systems that demand endurance without repair. By foregrounding voice, certainty, and non-consent, this episode challenges legal and social frameworks that require victims to neutralize their own testimony in order to be believed, arguing that enforced silence is not civility but a continuation of violence by other means.

11. feb. 2026 - 11 min
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