As the ICE crackdown continues, empathy lives and hope stays alive
(Photo by Baylor Spears/Wisconsin Examiner)
Gracias, Minnesota.
Gracias, America.
While Minnesota is where much of the resistance has been happening, my gratitude spills beyond its borders because the resistance has been virtually everywhere ICE brutality occurs.
Even before two citizens were killed by immigration authorities in Minneapolis recently, the country responded with a collective “ugh” to federal agents’ tactics.
It hasn’t escaped notice that this purge’s purpose, according to abundant evidence from the Trump administration, is to prevent the “civilizational erasure” white supremacists believe will be triggered by non-white immigrants.
The deportations have gone far beyond the stated mandate of removing undocumented immigrants who have committed serious crimes. Undocumented immigrants with no criminal records, legal immigrants and citizens have been routinely ensnared as if relentless quotas are at work.
The U.S. Supreme Court gave immigration authorities permission for their campaign of terror against all immigrants, whether they are in the country legally or not. Justice Brett Kavanaugh undid an order by a lower court that barred immigration authorities from using ethnicity as cause to arrest and detain. This is now appropriately called the Kavanaugh Stop.
Americans, even those who believe immigration really is a problem, are saying, enough.
Protests and polling tell us as much.
Trump supporters are turning on key architects of the purge, advocating a purge of their own. They are urging throwing Homeland Secretary Kristi Noem under the bus to appease voters as the congressional midterm election begins in earnest. The administration sent the guy who led the crackdown in Minneapolis, Border Patrol commander Greg Bovino, packing and replaced him with Border Czar Tom Homan.
This is progress.
Gracias, America, but the work won’t be done until Trump and Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller are effectively neutralized. They created and cheered on pedal-to-metal deportations that feature traumatizing children to deport them.
Other features of this purge:
- Harsh mass detention used as a cudgel to get immigrants to stop their claims for lawful stays.
- Inviting undocumented immigrants married to U.S. citizens and who are pursuing legal status to come in for interviews where they are then arrested and detained for deportation.
- And the jack-booted tactics generally of masked immigration agents who trample rights and deny due process.
The protests grew after immigration agents killed Renee Good and Alex Pretti, white U.S. citizens who had empathy for the scores of non-white victims of this purge.
They didn’t have to step up. And they haven’t been alone.
Minnesota doesn’t have a large undocumented immigrant population relative to other states such as California, Texas, New York and Florida, but its citizens, armed only with whistles and cellphone cameras, have put themselves on the frontlines.
Empathy lives.
Enter hope.
U.S. history’s lesson: When injustices have been overcome, it is because people who don’t directly bear the brunt of the injustice have risen up. Good and Pretti were two of them.
More than 77 million people voted to reelect Trump in 2024. They knew exactly who and what they were getting.
It’s difficult to not give in to despair when your fellow Americans reelect venality and cruelty, Trump’s trademarks.
No, despair doesn’t quite capture the feeling. It is a gnawing pain in the soul that makes one feel so desolately alone. Cynicism and hopelessness beckon.
Gracias, America, for giving me and others hope that MAGA may not ultimately speak for America.
But, for now, it is a hope that requires nurturing. We’ve been disappointed before.
The midterm election and then the 2028 election will tell the tale. The first could make Congress a truly co-equal branch of government with the power to check this imperial presidency. The second will send an even stronger message if candidates who follow Trump’s playbook of nativist division are trounced at the polls.
It will take both those events to signal course correction.
Undocumented immigrants live in the crosshairs. It is part of their existence. They’ve always known that arrest, detention and deportation could happen. They’ve always known the risk but brave it to escape persecution and poverty in their native countries and to secure brighter futures for their children.
What’s different now is the brutality.
The broadening pushback is a signal that America may be at yet another turning point – that the direct targets of injustice are not alone, that others stand and fight with them because humanity counts and citizens feel called to stand up when they see American values betrayed.
From the son of people who were once undocumented, a heartfelt gracias.
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