Seeing Punishment: Visual Persuasion, Death Penalty Politics, and the Image of the Migrant
The image before us is engineered to provoke: a central, shouting presidential figure framed against circular portraits of two others, one with eyes obscured, the other in military fatigues; a banner of American flags; stark, all-caps text that proclaims a policy — “DEATH PENALTY FOR ANY MIGRANTS WHO KILL AN AMERICAN OR LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICER” — and ends with a blunt question, “DO YOU SUPPORT THIS MOVE?” At the level of aesthetics, the piece uses contrast, color, and composition to conflate patriotism, threat, and moral urgency in a single, shareable moment. But beneath the visual punch lies a tangle of ethical, legal, and political issues that merit careful unpacking.