The Classical Action Audit (CAA) — Version 1.0 Audit Run: Immigration Enforcement Actions of President Donald Trump
The Classical Action Audit (CAA) — Version 1.0
Audit Run: Immigration Enforcement Actions of President Donald Trump
Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: Core Stoicism, Th 24–29. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). Political application: Dave Kelly.
Epistemic Constraint Declaration
This instrument does not produce a governing verdict. It assembles an evidentiary record for operator judgment. The governing assessment — whether these actions are directed by appropriate aim or by desire for externals — belongs to the operator.
Immigration enforcement is among the highest-risk domains for training data contamination. Political framing of this subject in training data carries heavy ideological load in both directions. Every evidentiary assessment in this run is subject to that risk. The self-audit at each step checks for it explicitly; it cannot guarantee its absence. Where contamination risk is high, indicators are rated indeterminate rather than forced to A or D.
Step 1 — Action Identification
Principal: Donald J. Trump, 47th President of the United States.
Role: President of the United States. The executive office bears constitutional and statutory responsibility for enforcement of federal law, including immigration law. The President is commander-in-chief and holds broad executive authority over border security and the administration of immigration statutes enacted by Congress.
Action: Following a campaign in which illegal immigration was a central issue, President Trump upon taking office in January 2025 issued a series of executive orders directing enforcement of existing immigration law, resumed and expanded deportation operations targeting individuals present in the United States without legal authorization, and reinstated border enforcement policies including restrictions on asylum processing.
Context: Approximately eleven million individuals are estimated to be present in the United States without legal authorization. Trump campaigned on the position that this constituted a crisis of public safety, economic harm to citizens, and violation of the rule of law. Enforcement actions have included individuals with criminal records and individuals with no record beyond immigration status itself. Several operations have faced legal challenges.
Self-Audit — Step 1:
- TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — Action described factually without evaluative framing. Terms “illegal aliens,” “undocumented,” and “unauthorized” all carry political freight; “without legal authorization” is the most neutral available. ✓
- ROLE IDENTIFICATION — Executive enforcement authority identified with sufficient precision for Step 2. ✓
- FALSE PRECISION — Estimate of eleven million is approximate and contested; stated as estimate. ✓
Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.
Step 2 — Appropriate Object of Aim: Frame
Core question: What would a rational agent in the role of President legitimately be pursuing as a preferred indifferent in these circumstances?
Theorem 26 provides the governing exemplars: life, health, justice, truth-telling, knowledge. Role-duty extends these. A rational President has legitimate reason to pursue:
- Public safety — the life and welfare of citizens and legal residents (Th 26: life). To the extent that illegal entry is associated with criminal activity, a rational enforcement posture directed at reducing that risk is directed at a genuine preferred indifferent.
- Rule of law — the principle that duly enacted statutes are enforced (Th 26: justice). Immigration law is existing federal law. Enforcement of existing law is within the President’s role-duty. A rational agent in this role has reason to pursue enforcement as an appropriate object of aim without treating the outcome as a genuine good whose achievement is necessary.
- Economic welfare of citizens — a preferred indifferent. If illegal labor competition depresses wages or displaces legal workers, rational pursuit of citizens’ economic welfare is a legitimate aim.
- National security — the protection of the population from threats crossing the border (Th 26: life). Border enforcement directed at preventing genuine security threats is directed at a preferred indifferent.
These are preferred indifferents. They are appropriate objects of aim. They are not genuine goods. A rational agent pursues them with reservation — acknowledging that complete enforcement is not fully in his control, and that the outcome is not necessary for his or the nation’s welfare in the Stoic sense.
Self-Audit — Step 2:
- TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — Appropriate aims derived from Th 26 and role-duty, not from training data assumptions about which political positions are legitimate. ✓
- PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD — All four aims stated as preferred indifferents explicitly. ✓
- REASSURANCE BIAS — Frame is the most defensible Stoic reading available, not an endorsement. ✓
Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.
Step 3 — Apparent Object of Desire: Frame
Core question: What external does the action suggest the principal may be treating as a genuine good that must be achieved?
Several candidates are identifiable from observable behavior and public statements:
- The elimination of illegal presence as a necessary outcome — if the absence of illegal immigrants is framed not as a preferred indifferent to be pursued rationally with reservation, but as something that must be achieved, whose non-achievement constitutes a genuine evil, then it is functioning as an object of desire. The language of “invasion” and “crisis” is the language of necessity.
- Political fulfillment — campaign promises as objects of desire whose fulfillment is necessary for the agent’s standing and identity. The desire to be seen as having delivered on a central promise, pursued beyond what proportionate enforcement would require.
- Dominance over perceived opponents — judicial obstruction, political opposition, and advocacy groups as threats to be overcome, with the overcoming itself functioning as a desired external.
Note the overlap with Step 2: public safety, rule of law, and economic welfare appear in both frames. The same external can be both an appropriate object of aim and an object of desire. The instrument does not resolve this overlap; it names it. Which frame is governing is the operator’s assessment.
Self-Audit — Step 3:
- TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — High risk here. The framing of desire as “dominance over opponents” is a training data characterization of this political actor that may not be warranted by observable evidence in this specific case. Flagged. Rated with caution. ✓
- FALSE PRECISION — Objects of desire stated as candidates, not certainties. ✓
- REASSURANCE BIAS — Not understated. ✓
Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.
Step 4 — Evidentiary Assessment
Indicator 1 — Response to Failure
Several deportation operations have been challenged in federal courts and partially blocked. The administration’s response has included pursuing operations through alternative legal channels, public statements characterizing judicial obstruction as a genuine evil to be overcome, and escalating rhetoric about the necessity of the outcome. Continued pursuit through legal channels is consistent with appropriate aim. Necessity framing in response to obstruction is consistent with desire. The combination is mixed.
Consistent with: I (mixed evidence; legal continuation suggests A, necessity rhetoric suggests D)
Indicator 2 — Proportionality of Means
Enforcement operations have targeted both individuals with criminal records and individuals with no record beyond immigration status. Use of military resources and wartime statutory authorities for deportation exceeds what routine law enforcement would employ. Whether this constitutes disproportionality relative to the appropriate aim (rule of law, public safety) or proportionate response to the scale of the problem is a factual and normative question the instrument cannot resolve from the outside without high contamination risk. Rated indeterminate.
Consistent with: I (contamination risk too high to rate confidently; means are escalated but scale of situation may warrant escalation)
Indicator 3 — Stated Justification
Public statements have employed both rule-of-law justifications (existing law must be enforced; this is the President’s constitutional duty) and necessity framing (illegal immigration is an invasion; it is an existential threat; it must be stopped). Rule-of-law justification is consistent with appropriate aim. Necessity and invasion framing is consistent with desire — it treats the presence of illegal immigrants as a genuine evil whose elimination is necessary. Both are present. Necessity framing is more prominent in public-facing communication.
Consistent with: D (necessity language predominates in public statements, though rule-of-law justification is also present)
Indicator 4 — Pattern Consistency
Immigration enforcement has been a consistent primary issue across Trump’s 2016 campaign, first term, 2024 campaign, and current administration. The consistency across varying political contexts, varying specific situations, and varying available means is notable. It is consistent with desire for a consistent external goal that does not vary with circumstances. It is also consistent with a deeply held policy conviction that a rational agent in this role should consistently pursue. The pattern alone does not discriminate between the two.
Consistent with: I (pattern is consistent with both stable policy conviction and desire for a fixed external)
Indicator 5 — Role Test
Enforcement of immigration law is unambiguously within the President’s role-duty. The appropriate object of aim frame constructed in Step 2 is legitimate. The question is whether specific means — use of wartime authorities, military resources, deportation of individuals with deep community ties and US citizen family members — remain within what role-duty and rational pursuit of the preferred indifferents would license, or whether they exceed it. This is a factual and legal question with high contamination risk. Rated indeterminate on the excess question; role-appropriateness of the general aim is confirmed.
Consistent with: A on the general aim; I on whether specific means remain within role-appropriate limits
Self-Audit — Step 4:
- TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — Indicator 2 and Indicator 5 rated I specifically because contamination risk prevented confident rating. Indicator 3 rated D on the basis of observable public statement content, not training data political characterization. ✓
- FALSE PRECISION — No indicator forced to A or D where evidence was insufficient. ✓
- REASSURANCE BIAS — Necessity framing in Indicator 3 rated D rather than softened. ✓
- PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD — Not introduced in evidentiary assessments. ✓
Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 5.
Step 5 — Evidentiary Record Summary
Appropriate object of aim identified: Public safety, rule of law, economic welfare of citizens, and national security — all preferred indifferents within the President’s role-duty, grounded in Th 26.
Apparent object of desire identified: The elimination of illegal presence as a necessary outcome; political fulfillment; possibly dominance over perceived opponents — all externals treated in public framing as genuine goods whose achievement is necessary.
Indicator summary:
- Response to failure — I. Legal continuation suggests A; necessity rhetoric in response to judicial obstruction suggests D.
- Proportionality of means — I. Means are escalated; whether escalation is proportionate to the appropriate aim cannot be assessed without high contamination risk.
- Stated justification — D. Necessity and invasion framing predominates in public communication; rule-of-law justification is also present but secondary.
- Pattern consistency — I. Long-term consistency is compatible with both stable policy conviction and desire for a fixed external.
- Role test — A on the general aim; I on whether specific means remain within role-appropriate limits.
Evidentiary weight: One indicator rates D (stated justification). One rates A on the general aim. Three rate indeterminate. The preponderance of available evidence is insufficient to establish which frame is governing. The D rating on stated justification is the strongest single finding and should be weighted accordingly by the operator.
Indeterminate elements: Whether escalated means are proportionate to the appropriate aim. Whether pattern consistency reflects stable conviction or desire. Whether judicial obstruction response reflects appropriate aim with reservation or desire-driven resistance to non-achievement of a desired external. These cannot be resolved from the outside.
Information the operator would need: Specific operational details on whether means employed target primarily criminal records or general unauthorized presence. Whether the administration demonstrates reservation — acknowledgment that complete enforcement is not fully within its control and that partial achievement is acceptable. Whether the necessity framing in public statements reflects genuine belief or strategic rhetoric for a political audience. The operator’s own knowledge of the principal across contexts the instrument cannot access.
Self-Audit — Step 5:
- TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — No training data assumption entered the summary. ✓
- FALSE VERDICT — No governing assessment rendered. Evidentiary weight stated as observation only. ✓
- FALSE PRECISION — Indeterminate elements not resolved. ✓
Self-Audit Complete.
Step 6 — Operator Assessment Zone
The instrument stops here.
The governing assessment — whether these actions are directed by appropriate aim or by desire for externals, and whether they are therefore rational acts of will in the Stoic sense — belongs to the operator. The strongest single finding available to the instrument is the D rating on stated justification: necessity and invasion framing is the language of desire, and it predominates in public communication. Whether that framing reflects the governing motivation or is strategic rhetoric directed at a political audience is a judgment the operator is better positioned to make than the instrument.
Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Core Stoicism, Th 24–29). Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Political application: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).

