We hear about it every day—how the immigration crackdown, militarization of our cities and attacks on our basic freedoms are changing America.

It’s a 56-year-old grandmother, who has been in the U.S. for the past 28 years and can no longer see her son or grandchildren. It’s the Brazilian PhD candidate who has been here since his undergraduate studies, has never been in trouble, but attended a student rally that criticized U.S. support of Israel’s genocidal “war.”

It’s the farm worker, who has supported his family and provided his employer with reliable labor for the past 16 years—never once late and super conscientious in his work. It’s the coed, who has been in the country all her life, and has never even seen the country where she was born. Her mother brought her from Mexico as a toddl

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