Monday, March 2, 2026

a nation of immigrants

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American immigration‑enforcement in 2026 feels like our government built a very expensive anxiety machine and then pretended it was a moral stance. It’s the same old story—just with a new coat of nationalistic branding and a big tech budget. We’ve always had a talent for deciding who counts as “us” and who counts as “them,” but now we’ve wrapped it in unmarked Tahoes and tactical vests.
ICE, as a concept, is basically the country standing at its own front door pretending it doesn’t remember who built the damn house. A nation of immigrants performing amnesia with perilous procedural detachment. There’s certainly nothing conservative or “small government” about it. You can practically hear the paperwork groaning under the weight of its own self‑importance. What does the GOP stand for at this point?
You’ve expanded, by billions of dollars, a federal department to stand at the door of a country built by people who kicked down someone else’s. It is a curious thing to watch a nation of immigrants spend so much energy pretending it was born immaculate.
And the rhetoric—my god. “Protecting the border,” as if hope were something dangerous, a controlled substance. As if the real danger is the person crossing a line in the dirt rather than the country losing its grip on its own promises. People talk like newcomers are going to steal jobs, culture, stability. Buddy, that’s been the American story from the start, from the first time an immigrant landed on its shores asking for a chance at a new life, free from persecution…
The trouble with your enforcement agency is not that it enforces. Every nation enforces something. The trouble is that it enforces fear with the enthusiasm of a revival preacher and the subtlety of a plane crash..
The system itself runs on a kind of steady, procedural, institutionalized worry. Detention centers that echo mistakes we keep insisting we’ve learned from. A structure that’s very efficient at locking people up and very bad at remembering they’re human. It is a grand American tradition to blame the newest arrivals for the oldest failures.
If America wishes to guard its gates, it should at least have the decency to remember who built the hinges holding those gates in place. Until then, ICE will remain what it is: a mirror held up to a country that cannot decide whether it is a refuge or a fortress, and so performs the worst habits of both.





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