The term “psy-op” has become popular among far-right conspiracy theorists looking to portray liberal government officials as nefarious manipulators. It’s a military reference to “psychological operations”: essentially, nonviolent warfare meant to deceive or manipulate your enemy to gain an advantage in a conflict.
In recent months, for example, conservatives have accused Taylor Swift of being part of a liberal “psy-op” simply because she was named Time magazine’s “Person of the Year” — a ridiculous claim I explained live on MSNBC last year.
But the GOP’s “psy-op” accusations aren’t merely ridiculous because they’re untethered from reality — they’re also ridiculous because they’re so obviously projections. If anyone is perpetrating a “psy-op,” it’s Republicans and their cruel, calculated anti-immigration stunts: flying and busing migrants from the border to Democratic-led cities and relishing the chaos that’s caused, as well as repeatedly portraying migrants as “invaders” on right-wing media.
These are publicity stunts — mind games, propaganda — designed to engender anti-immigrant fervor among the public, and ultimately to force Democratic lawmakers to embrace less humane policies toward immigrants. To some degree, Republicans are succeeding on both fronts.
And the right-wing immigration “psy-op” doesn’t end there. Republicans made clear this week that the strategy isn’t merely to portray immigration as out of control, but also to frame the situation as a problem only a Republican administration — specifically, a Trump administration — can fix.








