Following the high-profile killing of Alex Pretti by ICE agents in Minnesota and subsequent “No Kings” protests, the discourse around federal law enforcement is intensely moralized. One side frames federal agents as “guardians of the rule of law,” while the other frames them as “instruments of neofascism.” Alliance Theory cuts through this by looking at how these labels are used to discipline domestic rivals. Labeling ICE as “immoral” is a way for local leaders to signal defiance against federal authority (the OBBBA’s “coercive federalism”), while the federal government’s defense of these agencies is a signal of loyalty to its base of “law and order” voters. The “morality” of the specific event often matters less to the national actors than the opportunity to reaffirm their respective alliance boundaries.
ChatGPT says: 1. Two sides are not really debating facts — they are signaling alliance loyalty.
After the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, discourse polarized quickly:
One coalition frames federal agents (ICE/Border Patrol) as defenders of the rule of law responding to disorder, and by extension as loyal to “law-and-order” constituencies and federal authority.
The opposing coalition frames the same agents as instruments of repression and overreach, a threat to civil liberties and local autonomy.
Both frames are cheap and effective coalition signals: they tell audiences who you stand with and who you are against. The specific facts — who was armed, what video shows, how many shots were fired — matter less to alliance signaling than the alignment such narratives create. In Alliance Theory terms, the choice of frame is a loyalty test for each side’s base.
2. “Morality” is a tool to discipline rival coalitions, not just describe events.
Labeling ICE actions as “immoral” or “justified” serves two strategic purposes:
For local actors and critics: framing the federal presence as brutal or excessive signals defiance toward centralized power and aligns with coalitions favoring states’ rights, civil liberties, and anti-federal enforcement norms. It demarcates believers in local autonomy versus federal coercion.
For federal defenders: emphasizing legality and “law enforcement necessity” signals loyalty to federal institutions and supporters who prioritize border control and national authority, effectively staking out identity territory for their coalition.
Alliance Theory calls this moral cudgeling — moral language used not to illuminate truth but to punish rivals, reward loyalists, and affirm alliance boundaries.
3. The protests and narratives are coalition rituals.
The many protests, vigils, and nationwide demonstrations (e.g., memorial bike rides and coordinated rallies in multiple cities) are not just expressions of outrage — they are collective alliance signaling events. People participating are effectively saying:
“I reject federal power being exercised this way, and here’s my tribe’s public demonstration of loyalty.”
“I share this coalition’s worldview about justice and governance.”
Large gatherings and visible action reinforce group identity and test whether participants are inside or outside the coalition.
4. Federal authorities’ defenses also serve coalition maintenance.
When federal officials emphasize legality and rule of law — or when judges uphold the ongoing operation against state challenges — it signals to their own coalition that they remain committed to core values (security, order, institutional authority) and that defecting from those signals risks losing influence within the broader alliance.
5. Local versus national framing is itself a coalition battle.
State and city leaders decrying the operation as unconstitutional or harmful are not only critiquing tactics; they are differentiating their coalition identity from federal authority. That’s why they emphasize constitutional norms and community autonomy — it reinforces their linkage with other actors who oppose centralized power or who prioritize civil liberties over enforcement.
Conversely, federal defenders emphasize national order and enforcement legitimacy to maintain cohesion with supporters who value strong federal prerogative.
Why This Matters in Coalition Terms
Under Alliance Theory:
Moral language (“guardian of law” vs. “neofascist instrument”) is cheap to produce and high-impact as an identity signal.
The same event gets woven into different alliance narratives because each coalition seeks to cement internal cohesion and punish out-group defectors.
Media prominence (multiple stories, front pages, NGO reports) reflects that many institutions are aligning publicly — not just reporting facts but performing alliance solidarities.
Seen this way, the intense moralization around the Pretti case is less about pure truth-seeking and more about wielding narratives to reinforce alliance boundaries and punish rivals.
