Shining a Light on I.C.E. Raids: Empowering Communities

I have seen reports of detainees getting off planes in El Salvador and of Trump, et.al., discussing Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the person the Supreme Court has decreed must be returned. How is it that there were no reports of Garcia’s arrest and detention on the news or on social media?
What about all those detainees seen on TV getting off the planes in El Salvador? How did their round up not make the news?
Democracy thrives in sunlight, dies in darkness.
I saw my first ‘detention’ video on Bluesky.

This is happening in America! IN AMERICA!!
Why is the above post not on all social media and reposted repeatedly? Why haven’t I seen this on the mainstream news media?
The plan.
When the arrest and detention of people is invisible, I.C.E. agents can be more aggressive, do things they would not do if they were being watched. This is intentional. It maximizes the fear generated while reducing the response options by those being accosted.
The Americans conducting these raids need to be exposed to the public at large, to their neighbors and friends. If we shine a light on the process, much of the fear will dissipate. By making the process public, perhaps, we can make the jackboot mentality of these agents waver in the light of day.
What if we had flashmobs for I.C.E. raids?
For those of you who do not remember flashmobs: Groups of people would spontaneously show up at random public places, perform something they had been instructed to do, and then disperse quickly.
How it works.
Imagine you are walking out of a store and you see an ICE vehicle pulling up across the parking lot. You take out your phone, open an app, and tap the alert button. The people you alerted begin showing up as you walk toward the I.C.E. vehicle. Within minutes, there are 150 people surrounding the I.C.E. vehicle filming and posting what is happening on social media.
How differently would the video encounter in the link above turn out if the car were surrounded by 200 people with cell phones posting live on social media? 500 or a 1000 people?
Please help.
The app.
If there is an existing app that can be used, I have not found it. Someone reading this let me know if there is one. Otherwise, it will require one or more people to build one (I do not have those skills). Unless coders volunteer, this will cost money.
Making it available.
Then someone with experience needs to get it posted to be available free of charge at the various online stores for download.
Testing.
Besides coders, I need as many commitments as I can get to participate in persuading people to download the app to make sure it works, as intended.
Email me if you wish to participate. Install Signal on your phone if you have not already.
Addressing The Problem of Visibility

Things are very scary out there in America. In a text from AOC, she claimed that what we are experiencing a 5-alarm fire. That is a mild depiction. I think what the Trump Administration is doing, i.e., gutting federal agencies, ignoring the constitution, the law, and the courts, is more than a simple conflagration.
A more apt description can be found in the movie “Live Free or Die Hard.” The situation in the film is eerily like today’s America. Justin Long explains to Bruce Willis what is happening like this, “It’s a Fire Sale. You know, everything must go!” We are amid a wholesale destruction of the federal infrastructure that overlays the Constitution, the foundation of our democracy. You can get my more complete appraisal in my last blog post: “Into the Storm.”
As I have said in multiple previous posts, we, on the left, have a problem. We are invisible. Now more than ever, we need to be seen. To that purpose, I have designed four new shirts that allow the wearers to shout how they feel without saying a word. The more of these on the streets, the louder the voice. Great for protests and marches.
Currently these shirts are only available in long sleeve, 100% cotton, unisex fit that runs one size small.
What The F**k?

While Jo Anne and I were having wine with some friends, one of them expressed the idea for this shirt. It defines my sentiment each/every day since January 20th. I designed different versions of this shirt: WTF? shirt for women and WTF? shirt for men. I have Asian and African American versions in the works. If you would like one of those, let me know and I will make the one you want available.
Where Your Tax Dollars Go

Here is a glimpse of validation: In the last decade alone, Elon Musk has received $15 Billion in federal subsidies (our taxes). 25% of your taxes go to Billionaires. This is the first image I attempted on Designer. It took me 24 iterations to get the image I used for the shirt. I added “MY SHARE” on the side of the wheelbarrow to cover “U.S. Treasury” misspelled by AI. After I had the image, I could not find the right wording to make it work. In the meantime, I created the other two designs.
Stamp Out Organized Crime

Unless you are not paying attention, you are aware that what the billionaire class is doing to us is, by design, to keep us in our place and at one another’s throats. Stamp out organized crime Jail Billionaires. For this image, no matter how I changed the description, I could not get three rich looking men in a cell without at least one of them sticking through the bars or standing outside the cell. I had to make two separate images for the room and the men then layer them to get what you see.
Help me continue doing this and make all of us more visible. Get your shirt today! Follow the double underlined links above to order the shirt you like. I wear one every day.
Disclaimer: I created the images for these shirts with Microsoft Designer AI. The message on all four shirts was constructed by me in Microsoft Publisher and added to the images. AI is not particularly good yet in organizing or spelling words.
Dear Black America

I did not comment on Black History month this year. I celebrated instead by reading “The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story” created by Nikole Hannah-Jones. Practically none of what I read was taught in several high schools and the few colleges I attended culminating in a degree from The College of William and Mary. All that education varied little from the Nikki Haley version of an American Civil War not caused by slavery.
Apologies
I am a 76-year-old white man born and raised in Kentucky, the last state to ratify the 14th amendment… in 1976. At age 36 having been married and divorced, served in the Navy, and gotten a degree from the second oldest institution of higher education in America without looking back, I sold my meager possessions, climbed into my friend’s 1961 Chevelle with him, his brother, and his brother’s girlfriend headed to California. I was moving out of the South for the first time in my life. Everything I owned was in that car.
Unbeknownst to me the trunk, the invisible cartop carrier, and every crevice of our metallic pickle colored conveyance was filled to overflowing with racial baggage, mine and theirs. Since then, I have worked to unpack and jettison the contents of those invisible bags. Along the way, just when I thought I had finally rid myself of my last valise of bigotry, I would whiff that familiar musty rancor of intolerance my family, without knowing it, so lovingly passed along to me. Again, it would be time to disconnect those prejudicial feelings from the reality where I lived. I would like to apologize to African Americans everywhere for not making more progress in erasing my bigotry.
Thank you for your service!
It has become a fashionable way to acknowledge people like me who have been in the military. My belated response to Black History month 2024, then, is to thank Black America for their service to this country and to the lofty ideals I was taught in every American history class I attended.
To our country
I learned Crispus Attucks, a Black man, was the first to die in the American Revolution. Many more African Americans would die before Independence was won. You have served in every armed conflict in American history. You even served in five major American wars before being declared citizens by the 14th Amendment ratification in 1868. You have taken up arms and died in every campaign since then even when white military personnel on the same side refused to serve with you.
To our ideals
When white soldiers, sailors, marines, and aviators returned to their families after warfare, they came home to a peacetime America filled with promise. You returned to a different America where some of you were murdered by white Americans for daring to wear our uniform.
In slavery, you were denied ‘humanity,’ then, in freedom, citizenship and the right to vote. The First and Second Amendments did not apply to you in the presence of white America. Yet you continued to believe in the promise.
When African Americans were better educated and more qualified than any white person in the room, the only jobs available to you were cleaning homes, washing clothes, and mopping floors. You were redlined into ghetto neighborhoods with inadequate schools and denied credit to make improvements on those conditions. Still, you pressed toward the freedom and equality touted in our founding documents.
You were mistreated, marginalized, and suppressed. Your homes were destroyed. Your communities and churches were bombed. You have been beaten, mutilated, dismembered, and burned alive. You, African Americans, have been lynched and left hanging from anything that could, conceivably, hold your weight. Yet, you marched on in pursuit of what our founders proclaimed for its citizens.
Without your constant striving, there would be no Constitutional Amendments 13, 14, or 15, no Civil Rights Acts of 1964, ‘72, ‘87, or ‘91. Your efforts have driven America forward toward all our ideals. Without you, the soaring words of Jefferson and Madison would be little more than propaganda for rich white men like them. By standing in lines at too few polling stations, by navigating myriad voter restriction laws, by wielding your right to vote you kept a wannabe dictator from being reelected in 2020. Amid Women’s History Month, let me be specifically clear. It was Black Women voters that preserved democracy in 2020 and it is they who will save it again in November 2024.
You, Black America, are the primary reason the world sees us as the beacon of democracy, freedom, and equality. For enduring the brutality of our past, for your present sacrifice and ongoing anguish and distress in this righteous quest, for the freedoms I enjoy today, tomorrow, and beyond, I, and all Americans, owe you a debt of gratitude that can never be repaid. Please accept my deep felt thank you for your service.
Let us celebrate with action!
White America, it is time to stand up, shoulder-to-shoulder, arm-in-arm with Black America to demand financial Reparations for the horrific crime of slavery and the appalling treatment unto this day. Let us narrow and close the discriminatory wealth gap between us, ferret out and demolish all remnants of systemic racism pervading our daily lives.
We must secure commitments from those who represent us locally and nationally to act on our behalf rectifying these injustices for all time. We must return President Biden to the White House in November and elect Democrat majorities at local, state, and national levels so we all have the power and control needed to dispatch the sins of our past, to proudly declare, “Promises delivered at last!”
