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Opinion

This is a strange about-face for the Trump administration, which spent most of its first year in power targeting DEI programs in education. 

The Trump administration has a disturbing obsession with making what they probably think are cute and clever names for ICE operations.

ICE agents used 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos to lure his family members out of their home in a Minneapolis suburb on Tuesday.

According to an ICE memo obtained by the Associated Press, federal immigration officers are asserting sweeping power to forcibly enter people’s homes without a judge’s warrant.

As is usually the case, the story the Department of Homeland Security is telling about the shooting involves "criminal illegal aliens" and vehicles used as weapons.

Law enforcement leaders say ICE has violated the civil rights of U.S. citizens, citing incidents in which they have pulled guns on off-duty police officers of color, demanding proof of citizenship.

It’s a question that immediately raises a deeper historical one. Not just whether white participation ever existed, but what it actually meant, and what people imagine it would mean now.

The answer is not a single protest or a single election. It is a commitment to building leverage because what we are up against is not just a president or a party; it is a project.

This administration is not just targeting immigrants. It is dismantling the infrastructure that has allowed Black institutions to survive and thrive by attacking from multiple directions at once.

In this op-ed, Stephen A. Crockett Jr. writes that ICE has become a roaming tribunal that decides who gets to stay and who disappears.

Shawn and Destiny Jackson of Minneapolis say they and their children were on their way home when ICE agents tear-gassed their car.

Dr. King’s dream was not an invitation to complacency; it was a call to arms of the spirit. A call to organize, to resist, to transform.