facism happening in real time

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has had wide-ranging negative impacts on undocumented immigrants and U.S.-born citizens and communities more broadly, particularly in how immigration enforcement is carried out and experienced in everyday life.

For immigrants, the most direct harm comes through detention practices and deportations that separate families. Even when individuals have long-standing ties to the United States—jobs, children, or legal proceedings pending—they can be detained or removed, sometimes with limited notice. This creates instability for families, especially children who may be U.S. citizens and suddenly lose a parent or caregiver. Conditions in detention facilities is horrible. and the confinement itself—regardless of legal status—is be traumatic and destabilizing.

ICE enforcement has also been linked to racial profiling concerns, where immigration enforcement is perceived to disproportionately affect Latino, Black, and other minority communities. This can create a broader atmosphere of suspicion that extends beyond immigration status, affecting how entire communities are treated or perceived in workplaces, schools, and public spaces.

For U.S.-born citizens, especially children in mixed-status families, the impacts are often indirect but significant. They may experience economic hardship, emotional stress, and educational disruption when a parent is detained or deported. In some cases, citizens have even been mistakenly detained or questioned, raising concerns about errors in enforcement systems and due process protections.

At a broader level, critics argue that ICE’s role in aggressive enforcement contributes to a more divided political and social climate, where immigration becomes framed primarily through punishment and enforcement rather than integration or reform. This can intensify fear and mistrust between communities and government institutions.

Aggressive identification checks, detention practices, family separation, and fear within targeted populations sounds awfully similar to a certain time in the 1940s...


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