Tag: deportation

Home deportation
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From Robert Charles to ICE: Echoes of State Violence and Resistance in America

The summer heat bore down on New Orleans that July night in 1900 when gunfire first cracked the air. Robert Charles, a Black laborer who had dared to sit on a porch in a white neighborhood, would be dead within four days—his body riddled with bullets, then mutilated by a mob drunk on the kind of rage that newspapers cultivated and police sanctioned. Before he fell, Charles killed several officers in what he surely understood would be his final stand. The city erupted. White mobs roamed the streets hunting Black residents. At least 28 people died, most of them Black civilians guilty of nothing more than existing in the wrong place during a wave of sanctioned terror. The rhetoric that summer was familiar: dangerous criminals, threats to public safety, the necessity of force. Charles was not portrayed as a man defending himself against a violent arrest in a society that offered him no legal protection. He was a monster to be exterminated, and the Black community that harbored him deserved collective punishment. More than a century later, the same language of fear and control echoes through the detention centers and deportation raids of today.

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Kilmar Abrego Garcia and America’s Slide into Authoritarianism

In Trump's America, citizenship has become disturbingly meaningless. The horrifying case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia illustrates how swiftly constitutional protections vanish when executive power goes unchecked. Denied legal counsel, blocked from courts, and stripped of his right to due process, Garcia's story is a chilling warning: no citizen is safe if the government can arbitrarily erase your rights. As the administration moves closer to openly targeting political dissenters, human rights activists, and anyone branded an "agitator," Americans must confront the terrifying truth—today it's Garcia, tomorrow it could easily be you.

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Trump’s 2025 Deportation Architecture and the Unlearned Lesson of the Removal Act

Expedited removal is the twenty‑first‑century descendant of the Indian Removal Act: a policy engineered for speed, distance, and silence. When a government normalizes exile without a hearing, it is not testing the margins of due process—it is erasing them, and the targets keep expanding until the line between non‑citizen and citizen turns to vapor.