I Want You to Understand Chicago

(aphyr.com)

615 points | by tonyg 15 hours ago ago

246 comments

  • hypeatei 13 hours ago

    A news station producer was arrested by ICE and the agents peeled away ripping off someone's bumper[0][1] just for her to be released later without charges.

    0: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/oct/14/chicago-ice-...

    1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JLGI2hMaz5Q

    • chasil 10 hours ago

      I would say that any U.S. citizen living in an area of focus who is even vaguely latino and/or does not speak English well should obtain a U.S. "passport card" and carry it on their person at all times, as a federally issued ID. It's $65 for the first application, and $30 at renewals. In this context, the passport card is much more valuable than a state-issued ID.

      You know if your children should have them.

      A real passport at home is also wise, in case these ruffians "lose" the card.

      It is intolerable that U.S. citizens are detained in this way.

      • testing22321 9 hours ago

        ICE have the official policy that no paperwork is sufficient to prove citizenship. The only source of truth it their biometrics app

        https://www.404media.co/you-cant-refuse-to-be-scanned-by-ice...

        • chasil 9 hours ago

          That will certainly not work for children, as their faces change.

          I live in Illinois. Since Republican governor Ryan gave chauffers licenses to undocumented immigrants (resulting in fatalities), it is certain that an Illinois license is worthless.

          I had hoped that an ID issued by the U.S. Department of State would be a safeguard.

          Perhaps not, but wise to obtain both forms, for the judge.

          • testing22321 9 hours ago

            > That will certainly not work for children, as their faces change.

            I think that is the point.

          • Tadpole9181 8 hours ago

            Quite frankly, are you so naive as to think they give a shit?

            ICE is a gestapo and who they want to be illegal is illegal and can be whisked away. No consequences, no retaliation.

            They now have an all-knowing oracle who tells them the ultimate truth, all evidence be damned.

            • chasil 6 hours ago

              Then none of these documents are worth the paper upon which they are printed, and the advice has provable negative value?

              Do tell.

              https://www.nilc.org/resources/know-your-rights-expedited-re...

              • amypetrik8 6 hours ago

                hola amigos, ca habla un americano el citizeno --- que? no hablo ingles.

              • Tadpole9181 3 hours ago

                The DHS and ICE just randomly changed rules to this articles "expedited" process, officially declared that no paper documents count - only their homebrew app, and are now engaging mass raids without evidence or warrants that cause damage to people and their property with no means of reconciliation; this includes targeting home-born American citizens.

                This article is explicitly reactive and says so itself! None of these documents mean just about anything anymore - yesterday it was A, today it is B, tomorrow it is C. The rule of law has broken down in America.

                We've seen an entire national campaign about a man deported to a prison in a country he was being protected from. The administration has been caught with numerous citizens now. While arguing they have no requirement of due process and have a right to deport anyone anywhere they please.

                There's not negative value, you should still do it and hope there's still someone to stop them somewhere in the process. But believing this is simply a matter of "getting your papers in order" or explaining how "this is a bad idea" to them is nuts... as if the Nazis ever cared about the papers. If a Nazi official wanted you gone, you were gone. That's how fascism works.

                And before I hear anyone say "oh, please, Nazis, don't be irrational", Greg Bovino is effectively the commander-at-large of CBP. Today he did a Nazi salute in front of a crowd of people.

                And that's what America is, just 10 months in. An authoritarian police state with a Gestapo that's rapidly escalating. With no one left to stop them, it seems, what with local LEO and the NG and SCOTUS and Congress all being in on the game.

      • Uehreka 9 hours ago

        I get that you’re trying to help, but trying to find a bureaucratic/technical workaround through original research and proffering it as advice is not a super helpful thing to do right now. At this phase of the game, the best advice you can give people is to follow immigration lawyers and long-time activists on social media and do what they advise.

        I know we’re all used to being the problem-solvers in the room, but this is a time where those of us without specific expertise need to take direction from those who do.

        • chasil 6 hours ago

          I get that you yourself have not researched this problem.

          These are worthless?

          Notice this section: "Carry with you evidence of lawful entry or current lawful status in the United States if you have it."

          https://www.nilc.org/resources/know-your-rights-expedited-re...

          Edit: I went to Medellín, Colombia recently, and going through immigration, I said that I was there for my birthday. The officer then asked me, "That was May xxth?" I responded, "No, my birthday is August yyth." She handed it back and waived me through.

          Anyone making a mistake with details will see greater scrutiny.

      • mystraline 10 hours ago

        When the "do you belong here? " is a non-sarcastic adaptation of the Family guy skin color meme, no amount of 'proper IDs' will do shit.

        https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/family-guy-skin-color-chart

  • tky 8 hours ago

    Accurate, if even a bit softer than how it really is.

    I never felt unsafe in my west side Chicago community until the Black Hawks started doing daily intimidation runs. Until they abducted community members who were out working one day, gone the next.

    I used to push a wagon with side pockets full of bubbles, snacks, and toys. Now there’s fewer toys to make room for gas masks for kids and adults.

    Chicago is a tough town. People here are doing an amazing job restraining themselves and others. I’ve heard on more than one occasion people in crowds reminding one another to not give them reason to pull in the Guard.

    This will likely not be the case forever.

    More people need to see what’s happening here. This is not sustainable; generational harm is being inflicted on those directly targeted and those who seethe with anger and have to explain to kids why their friends aren’t around anymore.

    • lurk2 7 hours ago

      > have to explain to kids why their friends aren’t around anymore.

      How does that conversation go?

      • tky 5 hours ago

        Honestly, not well. It’s hard to articulate to a 4 year old that people like us are hiding for fear that they’ll be taken by “army men”

    • xdennis 5 hours ago

      Accuracy goes out the window in the second paragraph when he describes lawful powers of arrest as kidnapping.

      There's no point in engaging in conversation with people who describe enforcing the law as "illegal" while making every excuse in the book for people who broke the law to enter or say in the US (while simultaneously describing said illegal aliens as "undocumented" aliens). Crime is legal, punishing crime is illegal.

      • doganugurlu 3 hours ago

        What’s the accurate description when US citizens are _allegedly_ accidentally arrested?

        How much freedom citizens must sacrifice for these laws to be enforced?

  • thechao 14 hours ago

    A large part of this lawlessness is rooted in nonnormative behavior. But! there are basic protections we could have right now if we demanded them. First and foremost: the Bivens Act; specifically, the right to bring suit in State court against Federal agents. Presidential pardons can't help these thugs in State persons.

    • armada651 10 hours ago

      Don't they all have qualified immunity nowadays?

    • georgemcbay 11 hours ago

      Unfortunately the Bivens act was already heavily neutered well before this current trainwreck of a Supreme Court we have now was fully assembled (saving them the trouble of having to neuter it themselves):

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fktQUIkf6o0

    • tedivm 14 hours ago

      Until the supreme court overturns that.

      • tanjtanjtanj 13 hours ago

        They already did, more or less.

        The supreme court ruled that unless your case is virtually a carbon-copy of an existing Bivens case then it doesn't count. The current supreme court does not respect precedent in any meaningful way.

  • pizlonator 14 hours ago

    This is really sad to read!

    Can folks who live in Chicago confirm/deny/comment on the extent to which this article gets it right?

    (I have no reason to believe that it's an exaggeration, but I sincerely hope that it is.)

    • tedivm 14 hours ago

      I live in Chicago, and this article doesn't even scratch the surface of how bad it is. My wife went to the beach yesterday for 10 minutes to try and rest from the chaos and a fucking black hawk helicopter buzzed by her. They literally fly over my house daily.

      People, US citizens included, are literally being abducted. People have been shot and killed by masked agents. People have had their children abandoned on the side of the road after being kidnapped. Just today they raided Little Village with hundreds of masked troops. I'm in a dozen signal groups to get alerted about where things are.

      What scares me the most is how few people seem to actually know what is happening here. I talk to people outside of Chicago, and watch the news, and I don't see or hear about anything that's going on here. I tell them what's happening and they are shocked.

      It is impossible to convey what is happening here, how scared we all are for this country, and how much things seem to escalate every single day that this goes on.

      Edit: This post has been flagged and hidden, just demonstrating how much this country wants to pretend this isn't happening. It's unflagged now, but the fact that anyone would want to hide what's happening here shows how bad things are for all of us.

      • SlightlyLeftPad 14 hours ago

        The media has an existential threat of having their broadcast licenses revoked so yeah that probably has a lot to do with why there’s no coverage.

        If the media had balls, they’d broadcast anyway, license or not.

      • testing22321 10 hours ago

        > This post has been flagged and hidden, just demonstrating how much this country wants to pretend this isn't happening

        It’s so sad to see HN taking the side of violence and oppression with their “head in the sand” approach.

        I wonder how different the HN overlords would feel if their own families were being torn apart. This is Disgraceful and inexcusable. The shame.

        The only reason this is not currently flagged to oblivion is because it’s the weekend crowd.

        • lurk2 7 hours ago

          > I wonder how different they would feel if their own families were being torn apart.

          The people in favor of deportations presumably don’t have family members residing in the country illegally.

          -

          • doganugurlu 3 hours ago

            OP mentions US citizens being detained. Commenter is wondering how other US citizens supporting such activities would feel if their family was detained similarly.

            Unless you’re talking about citizens of another country that are in favor of these deportations, your comment is plainly illogical.

            • lurk2 42 minutes ago

              > OP mentions US citizens being detained.

              The comment I replied to did not mention US citizens being detained. He asked:

              > I wonder how different the HN overlords would feel if their own families were being torn apart.

              The great-grandparent comment by tedivm brings this up, though tedivm uses the word "abducted" - this could technically cover an illegal detention (which it seems like there have been at least a few), but the common use of the word would imply that US citizens were getting kidnapped and physically removed to another location without release. The number of times this has happened has not been 0, but in terms of documented instances, you're not talking about a very large group of people.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportation_of_Americans_from_...

      • enraged_camel 12 hours ago

        >> What scares me the most is how few people seem to actually know what is happening here.

        Submissions like this getting flagged contributes to that.

        I mention that because the previous submission with this article got flagged to death.

      • lurk2 10 hours ago

        > My wife went to the beach yesterday for 10 minutes to try and rest from the chaos and a fucking black hawk helicopter buzzed by her. They literally fly over my house daily.

        A BLACK HAWK HELICOPTER JUST FLEW OVER MY HOUSE

      • underlipton 11 hours ago

        >Visits from the ghetto birds

        >Facing police brutality with no accountability

        >Media blackout

        We're not beating the, "Horrible things that happen to black and indigenous Americans will eventually happen to everyone else," rap.

      • fluidcruft 11 hours ago

        RSNA is coming up later this month and generally I always attend but I'm probably just going to skip it. Just about nobody I know is going.

        • tptacek 11 hours ago

          Understandable, but note that decisions like that are part of the adminstration's objectives. This isn't a Chicago policy; it's a federal targeting of Chicago for political reasons.

          • fluidcruft 11 hours ago

            I don't need to make whatever is going on between Chicago and Trump my personal problem.

            • defrost 11 hours ago

              I understand a similar rational was often used in the later days of Weimar Republic.

              • fluidcruft 11 hours ago

                Feel free to attend RSNA, friendo.

                • defrost 5 hours ago

                  Looks interesting, but it's short notice to cross the globe given the state of my calender.

                  I appreciate the invite, I did some work with mammograms way back in time, since moved on through geophysical signal processing for remote images.

            • tptacek 11 hours ago

              Totally fair.

        • tedivm 11 hours ago

          Before I moved to Chicago I used to go to RSNA for work. If I didn't live in Chicago already I wouldn't be traveling here.

      • xdennis 4 hours ago

        > People, US citizens included, are literally being abducted.

        Show me a case where an ICE officer has been convicted of abduction.

        Or are you just saying that because you think you get to have a veto over every arrest?

        Just under Biden, 7.2 million illegal aliens have crossed the border (Trump says 10 million). [1] Why are you surprised there are so many arrests? There are so many people to send back. In fact, Trump is arresting so few people, that it will be impossible to bring the number down Obama levels.

        [1]: https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/million-migrants-border-bi...

      • jorts 12 hours ago

        I see your post and OPs just fine.

    • tptacek 11 hours ago

      I live in Oak Park, just outside Chicago (and adjacent to Broadview, where the major regional ICE detention center is).

      We have daily ICE sitings, and approximately every-other-day ICE detentions or arrests. It's a constant presence.

      What it means psychologically depends. If you're someone who could visually be mistaken (perhaps in bad faith) for a Latino, it's a very big problem. ICE/DHS routinely stops people based on their visual appearance, it takes 15 minutes for them to work out that you're present legally, and throughout the whole thing you have hanging over you that they might just decide to detain you at Broadview anyways, which is a nightmare even assuming your eventual release.

      If you're not someone like that --- at least where I live --- you can mostly ignore what's happening, if that's what you want to do. People are basically living their lives. About the closest an ordinary white/Black family here gets to direct disruption is needing to make special arrangements with their landscaping people.

      • Isamu 10 hours ago

        A big issue for people detained, even if they are citizens, is that it can take some time to be released, and when released you may not get your belongings back. That includes passport, phone, keys, cash, jewelry. The advice I am hearing is to avoid carrying around much if you are at risk.

      • fujigawa 11 hours ago

        > People are basically living their lives. About the closest an ordinary white/Black family here gets to direct disruption is needing to make special arrangements with their landscaping people.

        I've watched a few local news clips on the topic, they seem to be dominated by what I would term angry old suburban white women. What annoys me is once you peel back the thinly veiled feigned anger, it becomes clear they are mostly angry over uncertainty if Pedro will be able to shovel their driveway this coming winter.

        It's sad but no one seemed to care until their landscapers, roofers, etc. were impacted. Which begs the question, were they all deliberately going to the lowest bidder? Were they more upset about that vs. the human factor in any of this? (The assumption is a contractor on the up-and-up is verifying citizenship etc. before hiring employees.)

        I've literally watched news reports where people have openly declared "I don't care if they're illegal" (as long as their lawn gets mowed).

        Perhaps some self-reflection is necessary to see if that attitude is how we got here in the first place, and the response is an over-correction.

        • cafard 9 hours ago

          I am an angry old not-quite suburban white male. My household employs no servants. We mow our own lawn, we rake our own leaves.

          I know a fair number of people who are US born and have what appears to be a Central American complexion. I imagine much of the HN readership can get by without income for the time it can take a citizen, or someone with perfectly legitimate immigration status, to establish his or her bona fides to ICE. Not everybody who is getting in can.

          And have you looked into the big employers, not Harriet Homeowner, but the meat packing plants, to see how carefully they examine documents?

          Hell, have you examined the Trump organization's record?

        • tptacek 11 hours ago

          None of this has anything whatsoever to do with whether "Pedro" will be there to shovel their driveway. Nobody cares about that. We all live with 100% certainty that somebody will exchange dollars for snow shoveling. The reason you hear about landscapers right now is that ICE is directly targeting them. If you're ICE, looking to meet a detention quota from whatever quadrant Oak Park is in, the easiest way to do that is cruise down the street and stop anybody on a riding mower.

          • wombatpm 5 hours ago

            So no warrant, no probable cause beyond looking Latino. So it seems we have replaced stopping people for driving while black with stopping people for working while brown.

        • ocdtrekkie 10 hours ago

          Or people actually like and care about the people they transact with whether their grass gets mowed next week or not. Yeah, for some well off suburban folks, their closest impact might be someone who works for them. Doesn't mean they don't care.

          (And frankly, I'd rather my money goes to someone who really needs the money, not a corporate service.)

    • drewbug01 9 hours ago

      In a way, the article understates how bad it is. I live in Chicago, and in my neighborhood every lamp post (and mailbox, and other surface) has a poster detailing your rights. “Fuck ICE” (and related) signs all over. Most businesses and a lot of houses in my neighborhood have signs explicitly stating that ICE is not welcome inside without a warrant. My coffee shop regularly has free whistles to take, so you can help alert others.

      Just a few days ago I was working at a coffee shop and got a rapid response notice that ICE was about a block from me. I got a few more that day, all within a few blocks of my house.

      It is incredibly stressful. I married people, have kids who are not white - they are a target. I pray every day that the next daycare raid isn’t my sons daycare, that ICE doesn’t stop my husband as he goes to work, that my mother-in-law doesn’t get snatched off the street when she walks to Target.

      It’s bad.

    • AstroBen 14 hours ago

      I'm an immigrant in Chicago (fortunately not one of the racial groups they're targeting) and I follow it pretty closely - yeah it's all really happening. I saw kids get taken away in front of where I live and others just a few streets down

      The abuse of power there is ridiculous

      • tossacct999 11 hours ago

        > fortunately not one of the racial groups they're targeting

        …yet.

    • abuehrle 10 hours ago

      In the northern suburbs of Chicago, we often hear helicopters circling. A gardener was taken on my block. The home owner told the masked agent he didn't have permission to be on his property, and the agent pointed a gun at him.

      If you suspect anything is exaggerated, you can look to dozens of videos posted online of how these people act and speak. They roll in caravans of unmarked SUVs. Last week they rolled up to an elementary school (https://www.reddit.com/user/rubinass3/comments/1ol319f/ice_d...).

      [Here](https://x.com/LongTimeHistory/status/1986936912134000877) is a particularly hard to watch video of ICE tackling a nonverbal man.

      Things feel bad to me in a way (I suppose I'm fortunate to be able to say) they haven't until now. I normally can see the "other side" of issues but I can't fathom how this is what anybody wants. I'm angry and I'm sad.

      If there's a silver lining, the community is fired up. The mayor of Evanston talked with an awesome woman who was detained while peacefully protesting (https://danielbiss.substack.com/p/daniel-biss-talks-with-det...). It's a weird and sad time.

    • kasey_junk 13 hours ago

      My kids school has started doing drills with the students in what to do when ice shows up. Like they do for tornadoes. They need to because ICE is using schools as raid locations every day.

      • wombatpm 11 hours ago

        The children might be citizens, but ICE seizes them so that the immigrant parents have to show up and claim them.

        Chicago schools are reporting lower attendance as a result.

        We just had a case where a daycare provider was hauled out despite having her papers in order-she was subsequently released.

        Priests being shot in the head with pepper balls, intentional accidents being caused by agents. And when they do something so egregious that they might face charges, they runaway to other states with vehicles and evidence.

        I look forward to everyone in these organizations facing accountability. And not just the thugs on the street but the leaders first all the way to the top.

        Under the auspices of civil disobedience I refer people to Beverly Hills Cop and the bananas scene. Also, Bass Pro Shops sell liquid skunk smell. It would be a shame if it were to end up in vehicles or on the outside air vents of cars. No damage, just annoying.

        • ryandrake 11 hours ago

          > I look forward to everyone in these organizations facing accountability. And not just the thugs on the street but the leaders first all the way to the top.

          Unfortunately, the chances of this happening are minuscule, even if the executive branch ever changes hands in the future. The other party is too moderate, and doesn't have the backbone or courage to see it through, nor the patience and attention to detail to get them all. They'll be tied up in subpoenas, testimonies in front of Congress, hearings, hearings about hearings... Meanwhile, the people (both in leadership and boots on the ground) who are doing this today will slink back to normal life. The ringleaders will slide into comfy roles in think tanks, corporate boards, and lobbying groups. The hired thugs will go back to working as mall security and bouncers, hoping nobody remembers the time they cosplayed as Bond villain footsoldiers.

    • bckmn 9 hours ago

      It's all really happening. Pretty much every meeting with friends touches on what their recent sightings or stories of ICE terror have been. Everyone who hasn't seen it first hand has a second hand story.

      Absolutely everyone I talk to is against ICE's actions and that is the thing giving me hope that it will be defeated by the citizenry.

    • Freedumbs 6 hours ago

      Have you been ignoring the reports? This is a small slice of the carnage the government has unleashed. They've detained at least 170 US citizens so far for hours or days, shot numerous US citizens, killed US citizens, killed tens of people in detention, the detention center conditions are torture so people intentionally self deport, the people who are deported disappear, are never heard from again ...............

    • segmondy 10 hours ago

      worse, here's the chicago ICE commander performing a nazi salute to taunt people and then pretending he was playing rock paper scissors when he saw he was being recorded. https://www.reddit.com/r/chicago/comments/1os3ez6/greg_bovin...

    • tr4ce 13 hours ago

      It is really bad. A glimmer of hope is a governor with a spine.

      https://www.newyorker.com/podcast/the-new-yorker-radio-hour/...

      • tedivm 12 hours ago

        I live here, and Pritzker says the right things then does the wrong things. He sent the Illinois State Police to help protect ICE from protestors as Broadview, freeing up their resources to attack and kidnap people. In half the videos you see out there his state police as assisting ICE. We have Chicago Aldermen out in the streets and in the hospitals getting arrested and assaulted, we have candidates for congress like Kat Abughazaleh being indicted for protesting, and then Pritzker is giving speeches and going on podcasts while not even stopping his own thugs from helping ICE.

        He doesn't have a spine, he has an election strategy.

        • tptacek 11 hours ago

          Right now, I agree pretty strongly with this. In particular: Pritzker is the command in chief of the Illinois State Police. But the ISP is very conservative and fairly MAGA, and ISP has staffed protests pretty aggressively. Pritzker has in theory the ability to reorient ISP away from policing protesters and towards protecting them from DHS, and he has pointedly not done so.

          Even if he's just OK, doing a replacement-level competent job of being a governor dealing with a problem he himself did not have a hand in creating, this is his opportunity to demonstrate leadership during a crisis, and he's flubbing it. He's asking (we assume) for the highest job in the land, so he doesn't get to ask to be graded on a curve this time.

          (Not a fan of Kat Abu, though).

          • UncleMeat 8 hours ago

            The fact that everybody has just become okay with the fact that police forces are actively far right agitators is outrageous. If cops are desperate to smash skulls because they hate brown people then we need to completely dismantle and rebuild all of the police forces from scratch because it is impossible for them to be anything but violence machines.

            We have violent hate gangs staffed with military equipment, with the authority to kill, and with minimal care for the actual law.

          • digdugdirk 10 hours ago

            Curious about the random Kat Abu comment at the end there? I know nothing about her background, but it certainly seems like she's using her campaign to actively help her local community directly and immediately. And in times like these, we could certainly use more political candidates who are willing to be tossed around by DHS.

            What negatives am I unaware of?

            • tptacek 10 hours ago

              She doesn't represent the district. She picked it off a map, while living in (I think?) DC, hoping to replicate what AOC had done in New York --- knocking off a geriatric institutional Dem in a safe blue district. What really got me was that she moved to Chicago to run for CD9, and didn't even move to the district --- she moved to the Gold Coast (IIRC?), far outside CD9 (which is Rogers Park, Evanston, and the near north suburbs).

              There's a word for this (carpetbagging).

              Then more broadly there's the question of what a Representative is for. Is it "designated protester for the district"? If so, she's the leading contender. It's my belief that "most effective on-site protester" is not in fact the job of a congressional representative.

              It'd be one thing if the choice was between Kat Abu and a staid machine Democrat. But CD9 is naturally progressive, and she's up against Daniel Biss, a progressive with a real track record of getting things done (and unquestioned ties to the district). What I think she's really going to do, best case, is split the progressive vote.

              • input_sh 10 hours ago

                No, she moved there some months after her boyfriend Ben Collins became the CEO of The Onion, which is headquartered in Chicago. This is very easy to verify, they're not secretive about their relationship.

                • tptacek 10 hours ago

                  I don't care. She had never once lived in the district before declaring her candidacy for it, and only somewhat recently moved into the district --- after starting her campaign for it. I don't care who her partner is.

                  Think about the message that campaign sends: nobody, in one of the most progressive districts in the country, is as qualified to faithfully represent its progressive ideals as Kat Abu, who has neither ever lived there nor ever held elective office. To me, that's a campaign of contempt for the district.

                  I've seen the videos of her getting shoved at Broadview. Her immigration politics seem in line with the district. My response to that is: stand on Noyes and Sheridan and throw a rock. You'll hit someone who has identical immigration politics to her.

                  IL CD9 gets to decide, not me (I'm in CD7). But I do have an opinion!

              • digdugdirk 10 hours ago

                Good to know, thanks!

                One thing to consider though - while I would normally agree with you on the job description of a congressional rep, there are some moments in history where performative-protest-as-candidate can do more good than ill. I think we're in one of those times, and I'm glad she's able to use the congressional platform to put the executive branch's policies and actions on display.

          • ryandrake 11 hours ago

            It's kind of too late for quick action. You're not going to turn the attitudes of Law Enforcement on a dime. We need a decades long effort to eliminate MAGA, White Supremacy, gangs, lawlessness and thuggery from thousands of local and state police forces nationwide. These attitudes have so thoroughly infiltrated policing for so long, it's going to take deliberate restructuring of these institutions and personnel replacement to resolve.

            • tptacek 11 hours ago

              That attitude sounds like a really good way to be Brandon Johnson, the least popular mayor in the United States.

              Pritzker can either solve the problem or he can't. It's fine if he can't. I couldn't solve it. Few could! But if he can't, he's not qualified to be President, a job that will send him harder problems than this. It's fine for him not to be President. Most people (waves at the Oval Office right now) shouldn't.

        • selectodude 12 hours ago

          I think the reality is far scarier - he doesn’t have nearly as much power over ISP as he should.

          • inahga 11 hours ago

            If he doesn't, he needs to be forthright about it in his speeches and podcasts. "The ISP is disobeying my direct orders."

            Until then, he bears responsibility for their actions.

            • selectodude 11 hours ago

              The NYPD all but threatened to kill Bill de Blasio's daughter when he tried to bring them to heel. I'm limiting myself to being furious at the fucking freaks terrorizing my city instead of creating new shit to get mad about. There's plenty as is.

          • wombatpm 6 hours ago

            ISP enjoys support from the white rascisty southern part of IL as a bulwark against the Chicago Police and all of the brown people there.

          • tptacek 11 hours ago

            He does not. People working in public service law could have told you that long before Trump won the election. That's sort of not on him; it's its own political power center. But that's his problem to solve now.

        • xdennis 4 hours ago

          > He sent the Illinois State Police to help protect ICE from protestors as Broadview, freeing up their resources

          You're literally saying the quiet part out loud.

          So many people here are complaining that ICE is arresting US citizens, but you literally admit that they're interfering. And yes, it's illegal to "forcibly assault, resist, oppose, impede, intimidate, or interfere" with a federal officer. See https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/111

          You can do up to 1 year in prison for minor offenses, or up to 20 for using weapons and causing injuries.

    • giraffe_lady 13 hours ago

      Every bit of it is true and there's more that he doesn't mention, probably because it's not as well documented yet.

    • miltonlost 14 hours ago

      Did you look at the links he posted? Have you seen the news reports he linked to? This is all actually happening right now. Please, read all he linked to an watched the videos of ICE kidnapping people violently.

      https://chicago.suntimes.com/immigration/2025/11/05/daycare-...

      • pizlonator 9 hours ago

        I think my question had exactly the effect I wanted: lots of folks chiming in to give color.

        Of course I’ll read all the links! I’ve already read a lot about this!

        But the first hand commentary from fellow hackers is pure gold IMO

    • ocdtrekkie 10 hours ago

      I live in the Chicago area and can confirm. Landscapers are afraid to work because they keep getting abducted off people's lawns. Out in the suburbs, a roofing crew was abducted mid-roof replacement, ICE left a hole in someone's house trying to abduct people working for a living.

    • turnsout 14 hours ago

      It's not an exaggeration. People have been kidnapped by these armed masked idiots within two blocks of my house twice, and those are just the closest cases I know about. Go check out the /r/Illinois subreddit [0] to see what's happening.

      [0]: https://www.reddit.com/r/illinois/

      • turnsout 14 hours ago

        And of course now the parent post is "flagged." Thank you, Libertarian overlords, from protecting the tech community from this dangerous content.

        • tedivm 13 hours ago

          They unflagged it, but the pause in upvotes means it dropped off the front page and out of people's minds.

          • ryandrake 13 hours ago

            Mission accomplished for the flaggers. I don't know why HN can't/won't fix this obvious abuse mechanism.

            • hypeatei 12 hours ago

              It's a forum run by venture capital if that tells you anything. The "tech right" were one of the reasons Trump won this past election. It describes a voter bloc consisting of Libertarian/Thiel/Musk types who are very motivated by: immigration (H1B), deregulation, increasing their wealth, and gaining more power.

        • SlightlyLeftPad 14 hours ago

          I gotchu fam, I’m snapping Full page screenshots of all the commentary here.

        • UncleMeat 8 hours ago

          They aren't libertarians. They are fascists.

          I am rapidly becoming convinced that large portions of the SV ecosystem are just anti-human as a base ideology.

        • vkou 13 hours ago

          It would not be good to allow malcontents to spread disharmony.

    • queenkjuul 13 hours ago

      Not at all exaggerated. The agents are lying about anything and everything even when there's evidence. One of them threw tear gas out of the window of their SUV because they were pissed to be stuck in traffic. They'll hit and run parked cars and flee the scene.

    • jrexilius 11 hours ago

      I live in Chicago and it is a BIG city. I've seen, in real life, none of this. But the online reports are legion. I think, like a lot of things, you can choose what reality you want to inhabit and find anecdata online to support any of it. During the Obama adminstration the right wing whackos came up with theories about black helicopters and UN camps and the rest. This may be _slightly_ more factual as the Orange Troll is more purposefully playing a media game, but I'd still take these reports with a grain of salt.

      • Judgmentality 11 hours ago

        > you can choose what reality you want to inhabit

        Thank you for outing yourself as willfully ignorant. I also appreciate the unintended admission of privilege.

  • don_neufeld 14 hours ago

    I’m so glad that Kyle wrote this.

    I’m so sad that he had to.

    Pay attention to what’s going on and vote.

    • ryandrake 14 hours ago

      The problem is how many people enthusiastically voted for this madness, lawlessness and cruelty, and are still cheering it on.

      You can say "vote, vote, vote," and maybe it will work in 2026 or 2028, or 2030 or whenever, but the root problem is not going away: you are still surrounded by people all over the country who want this.

      • toomuchtodo 14 hours ago

        Margin of victory was ~2M votes, about how many voters 55+ die in a year. Hopefully enough voters have aged out or learned their lesson next time around (considering election results we've seen in the last week or so [1]). You're never going to convince unsavory voters to vote with empathy, the subject brain structure does not support it (anterior insular cortex, primarily), you can only hope they're aging out of the electorate at a reasonable pace (and not being replaced).

        "A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it." (Planck's Principle [2] applied to voting)

        [1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45818505

        [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck%27s_principle

        • ryandrake 14 hours ago

          It's comforting that maybe this mentality is correcting itself one funeral at a time.

          But what really makes me sad is how this mentality so quickly swept into the country to begin with. 30 years ago, the vast majority of Americans would be horrified at the thought of people being assaulted on the street in broad daylight, black-bagged, kidnapped and disappeared forever by masked, non-identifying thugs. Fast forward 30 years, and (chances are) my neighbors want this and are absolutely giddy at the thought of it happening here!

          Regardless of who votes for what, how did my country turn into this?

          • imiric 11 hours ago

            > how did my country turn into this?

            There are two components to this answer.

            First, your country has been divided since at least the mid-19th century. Every war has a winning and losing side, but the losers don't simply vanish. Their mentality persists throughout generations, even if it remains in the background, and is ignored by the other side.

            Secondly, all this technology you've built and allowed the world to use can and has been exploited by your enemies to your own detriment. The same systems you've built that allow manipulating people into buying things are also ideal channels for spreading propaganda and disinformation. Information warfare is not new, but modern technology has made it more effective than ever at manipulating groups of people, sowing dissent, and generally causing chaos and confusion within a nation.

            So, putting those two together, it's not difficult to see how acts of information warfare could be used to fuel the deeply rooted social divide, directly causing or strongly contributing to the internal sociopolitical instability you've been experiencing for the past decade.

            Meanwhile, your enemies can sit back and enjoy the show of an imploding nation. They know that you're untouchable via traditional warfare, which is why these tactics are so perfect. They do require a long time to come into effect, but they're highly effective, very cheap to deploy, and the best part is that they're completely untraceable to the attacker. It's still debatable whether there was Russian interference in your elections, and how effective it actually was, even though there is evidence for it. It's still debatable whether Chinese-operated social media platforms are a national security threat or not. Were J6 protesters rioters or patriots? And so on about every controversial sociopolitical topic.

            This confusion is exactly the intended effect. Your regular checks and balances, your laws, ideals and values, make no difference if your communication channels are corrupted.

            I don't see how you can get out of this mess, and I expect things will get much worse before they get better. Not just for you, but globally. These same tactics are also deployed in other countries, by the US as well. Though, ironically, countries that are cut off from the global internet have an upper hand in this conflict.

          • toomuchtodo 14 hours ago

            Tribalism, identity politics, low education and lack of respect for education and intellectualism, and late stage capitalism. A cautionary tale, for sure. People are angry, rightfully so, but at the wrong people. Thank Reagan (economics) and Gingrich (politics) for a lot of this we’re facing.

            Deepfriedchokes is right; we need stronger, more robust systems to protect humans from other humans, because we cannot trust the human (broadly speaking).

            • msandford 12 hours ago

              The Biden admin (no idea if Biden himself was involved) literally sued Texas to stop Texas from enforcing border law. This same admin also essentially redefined "asylum" to be economic asylum rather than "I'm afraid that if I go back to my country I'll be killed" which is how people typically thought of asylum.

              You can absolutely think that what's happening now is an overreaction, un-American, gross, illegal, and morally wrong.

              But if you're unwilling to try and understand how it's possible that over half the country voted for someone who would enact policies that lead to what we're seeing now, you're simply not paying attention.

              If you just want to see the people who voted for this as "the enemy" and "evil" you're basically doing the same tribal "othering" that's lead to these outcomes you don't like.

              Is that ugly and uncomfortable? Yes, absolutely. Will things get better by ignoring it? Absolutely not.

              • whoknowsidont 11 hours ago

                >If you just want to see the people who voted for this as "the enemy" and "evil" you're basically doing the same tribal "othering" that's lead to these outcomes you don't like.

                "If you point out problems, you yourself are actually the problem. I am very rational."

                Incredible logic.

                • msandford 8 hours ago

                  Okay so what's the solution then that doesn't involve having to disappear the half of the country that you don't agree with? I'm super open to better solutions. I just rarely hear any other than magical thinking. "All these evil shitbags will get reeducated and agree with me now" if it's not that, what is it?

                • drdaeman 8 hours ago

                  It is incredible, because a lot of people dismiss it so eagerly.

                  Let me try to phrase it differently: ostracization rarely yields positive results, and is more likely to lead to opposite of desired course of action through future radicalization.

                  In other words, saying that bad people are bad is - as paradoxical as it might be - less likely to making anyone better than make bad people even worse.

                  • whoknowsidont 8 hours ago

                    >It is incredible, because a lot of people dismiss it so eagerly.

                    Because it's wishful thinking, and it only serves one purpose and only benefits one group.

                    You can't say it wasn't tried. Far from it.

                    It didn't work out. Plain and simple.

                    • drdaeman 5 hours ago

                      Sorry, I absolutely appreciate the explanation instead of a snark remark, but I don’t understand.

                      What was tired or supposed to work out? Not ostracizing is not exactly a solution (grandparent comment haven’t made suggestions as to what to do instead), and alternatives aren’t one possible approach but a giant spectrum of possible reactions. Instead of saying “you’re a bad person” a lot of different things can be done, right?

                      Or do you possibly mean that we collectively tried everything and nothing ever worked out, so we’re fairly positive this is wishful thinking? Or am I misunderstanding something, or falling to some fallacy here?

              • ryandrake 11 hours ago

                > But if you're unwilling to try and understand how it's possible that over half the country voted for someone who would enact policies that lead to what we're seeing now, you're simply not paying attention.

                Anyone who's read about the history of Germany in the 1920s and 1930s should understand how it's possible. We can still feel disappointed and helpless that the same mentality is rearing its head again, especially in a country that itself sent people overseas to fight it 100 years ago.

                Off and on throughout my life as an American, I thought my fellow Americans could be sometimes be described as arrogant, sometimes uninformed, sometimes overconfident, sometimes over-patriotic, sometimes selfish. But never needlessly cruel and cold-blooded like millions are today. This is new and terrible. It's absolutely sickening to walk outside in my neighborhood, look at 10 houses and think maybe 3 or 4 of them are homes to people who are OK with what is happening.

              • don_neufeld 11 hours ago

                Which lawsuit are you referring to?

        • deepfriedchokes 14 hours ago

          We shouldn’t need to count on voters dying to avoid outcomes like this. Our institutions are broken if they can’t protect the public from a mentally ill public official on a power trip.

          • ryandrake 14 hours ago

            The point is that we are not talking about protecting the public from a few mentally ill public officials. These officials didn't just appear out of the ether, they were voted for by tens of millions of voters who want this. Even if the officials go away, those voters are not.

            • strken 12 hours ago

              I'm not sure this is the correct perspective on voting. Voters are often passionate about one or two key issues - crime, Israel v Palestine, cost of living, immigration policy, coal towns, Ukraine, military spending, or whatever is most important to them.

              If they voted for Trump it doesn't mean they agree with him on immigration and crime. They just have to think it's less important than the positions they do agree with. An effective argument to win over those voters isn't "you're evil and should have better opinions," it's "immigration policy is important too and this one is really bad, plus Trump is doing a bad job on your pet issues."

              • toomuchtodo 10 hours ago

                You’re expecting rationality where it will not be found. The do not care about effective arguments, they are vibes and emotion driven.

                • strken 5 hours ago

                  You can make a vibes- and emotion-based argument that isn't "you are evil."

                  • toomuchtodo 4 hours ago

                    I disagree. Can you talk someone out of their religion? Their identity? Their belief system? In most cases, you cannot. Exceptions exist, certainly, but are not the norm in this regard. This could include those who are proudly racist, proudly misogynist, or take joy or satisfaction in the harm or pain of others. Are they evil? I think that distinction is a waste of time to be honest. All that matters is: “can you convince these people to vote differently?” If not, any time or effort you spend on them is wasted, and the evidence is robust a lot of these people will keep voting as they have, regardless of argument made.

        • saulpw 14 hours ago

          The replacement voters are currently teenagers. They haven't "learned their lesson", they aren't old enough to have experienced politics at all. They were 6 years old when Trump was elected the first time. This is their reality and we can't expect that the electorate gets more sensible because old people rotate out.

        • abraxas 11 hours ago

          Complete hopium. I remember twenty years ago as we witnessed the second term of W and the talks about the republican party's base dying out and losing their support with it. Yet 21 years later they are going stronger than ever with just mayhem and chaos to show for it. Nothing constructive accomplished in two decades. They either obstructed when out of power or favoured the billionaire class when in power. Yet they rebranded themselves as the "revolutionary" party and suckered enough idiots to vote for them enthusiastically.

          You are fucked, American friends. And we're all fucked with you and because of you. When you sneeze the rest of the world catches a Covid sized cold so you're taking down the rest of us with you.

        • queenkjuul 13 hours ago

          Sadly GenX seems to be getting on board as quickly as the boomers are dying off

          • Izkata 5 hours ago

            Gen X are approaching retirement age.

      • ssl-3 14 hours ago

        We must always vote. Our voter turnout for elections in the US is approximately shit.

        We must also do other things, too: Voting isn't the end-all, be-all solution to everything. (And that's OK; we can do more than one thing at a time.)

        But the absolute necessity of actually-voting is a constant, and I'm equipped with a profound amount of intolerance towards any idea that may suggest otherwise.

        • throwaway173738 11 hours ago

          Yeah, the people who suggest voting doesn’t matter are either suffering from some nihilistic delusion or they’re spreading a self-serving lie.

          • atmavatar 11 hours ago

            Or, they live in one of the 40-something states where the election margins are large enough that it doesn't matter whether they vote.

            My state hasn't voted Democrat since 1964. The only two elections with less than a 10-point spread since then were in 1976 (7.5% spread) and 1992 (5% spread due to Perot stealing votes from Bush Sr.).

            I moved to this state in 1993.

          • gishh 10 hours ago

            Hmm. Possibly.

            I predict that California will “go blue” in the presidential elections for at least the rest of my lifetime. Someone who “votes red” in California can say that their vote doesn’t matter, and a reasonable person would understand why they feel that way.

            You don’t seem like a reasonable person, or you’re also suffering from some nihilistic delusion, possibly.

            • ssl-3 10 hours ago

              The most sure method any of us can individually enact to help to ensure that our favored candidate is not elected is to declare that it doesn't matter, and then just give up and not vote.

              This method is literally an example of nihilism.

              • gishh 10 hours ago

                So are you saying that, in this instance, understanding your vote doesn’t matters is delusional, or not? You never addressed that.

                You latched onto the nihilistic part, which I suppose isn’t surprising.

      • WillEngler 14 hours ago

        There are some who voted for Trump and do celebrate the cruelty on display in Chicago. But I also think many wanted to deport "the worst of the worst" and that is what they thought they were promised. And per the media many consume, that is what's happening. It's an open question on whether the real extent of the crackdown will break through the echo chamber, but from conversations I've had with people who consume Fox News, I really do think a lot of Trump voters will not be ok with the tactics as they are actually being carried out. For example, I just don't think that earnest religious conservatives I know would defend denying the Eucharist to people in the processing facility (https://blockclubchicago.org/2025/11/02/faith-leaders-again-...) and then banning prayer outside the facility altogether (https://blockclubchicago.org/2025/11/07/feds-tell-faith-lead...). When you lay out this (and the many events in Aphyr's post) to them clearly, they really don't like it.

      • tptacek 11 hours ago

        I don't think this framing is very helpful. Whatever you believe about the people who pulled the lever for Trump, which included an unprecedented number of Latino and Black voters, they exist, and they're not persuaded by your disapproval. I think a really big problem we have on my side of the aisle is the belief that there's a celestial referee who will call offsides on the Republicans if we can just find the right argument at the right amplitude.

        What led into our current circumstances was several years of uncontrolled, chaotic immigration, caused in large part by specific articulable decisions Biden's administration made. People felt like the situation had gotten out of control, and they weren't wrong. Every day I'd commute into my office and pass multiple corners and Ike off-ramps(!) staffed by a woman and several of her tiny children, out in the cold, trying to sell bottles of water.

        My reaction to that wasn't "deport them". I'm a liberal Democrat. But we're kidding ourselves if we think a natural reaction to that situation was "this is fine".

        The election was fully determined by inflation. Biden made a reasonable (though incorrect) bet that full employment was more important than price stability. It was not: people fucking hate inflation. By a large factor inflation was the most important issue in the 2024 election. But the second-most important issue was immigration (like it has been throughout Europe over the past 10 years) and then after that the issues sharply trail off in importance.

        • mmooss 5 hours ago

          The conservative message machine is determinative, and they would find something to effectively raise a storm about: immigration, inflation, etc. If Biden cut inflation, they would have demonized him regarding employment. Or just make something up - they can say anything at this point, and the Dems and others have made themselves helpless. They will always find something - Biden and Dems were being called pedophiles in 2000, the election was stolen, etc.

          Remember that the GOP stopped immigration reform in Congress for many years, including killing the agreed-upon bipartisan immigration reform bill at Trump's behest during the election. If your theory is correct, that would have disqualified the GOP among those voters.

          • inemesitaffia 2 hours ago

            >bipartisan immigration reform

            The bill that wasn't required for deportation?

          • cloverich 4 hours ago

            I don't think that's true. It was easy to call in Trumps first loss, i remember telling my dad: Economy goes bad, he'll be right back. Immigration may have mattered enough, and likewise Bidens cognitive decline. Lastly people didn't like Kamala in the primary, and they dont like candidates forced on them. That was many things stacked against a dem victory, and it was still close.

            The dems main ongoing weakness as an extreme generalization, is choosing marginal hills to die on, and using hyperbole for everything.

        • keeda 8 hours ago

          > The election was fully determined by inflation. Biden made a reasonable (though incorrect) bet that full employment was more important than price stability.

          There is credible theory (shared by a very balanced labor economist I follow) that the immigration crisis helped tame the inflation crisis, besides boosting the economy enough for a soft landing:

          https://fortune.com/2024/04/12/immigration-inflation-economy...

          Also some studies for and against this theory:

          - https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WP/Issues/2025/01/10/Imm... (Finds inflation lowered.)

          - https://www.dallasfed.org/research/economics/2025/0708 (No effect on inflation, but yes on GPD growth.)

          Now, I'm not saying this was always Biden's plan, but the economics are not as straightforward as "employments vs inflation."

          • tptacek 8 hours ago

            Right, so, I'm not making a normative claim about the right about of immigration. I don't know if I'd go so far as to call myself an "open borders" person, but I'm very pro-immigration. Pro-immigration in the sense of believing we benefit from the mix of new Americans we get over our southern border, not in the weird doublespeak sense of appreciating skilled immigration from Europe.

            But from 2021-2023, we experienced a destabilizing sudden amount of immigration. We'd had immigrant-friendly policy during Obama, but I don't recall many dozens of Venezuelan refugees on the doorstep of our Village Hall. Obviously, that happened in large part because southern governors bussed people (often without their informed consent) to northern states. But so what? All that says is that we were experiencing something the southern states had been experiencing all along.

            My big point here is just: it's not enough to say how strongly you feel about immigration in 2021-2024. Enough people hated it that it motivated a materially important bloc of voters. I disagree with those voters. But I also disagree with people upset about inflation, and I feel like we generally understand that those of us on my side of the employment/inflation question were just, you know, wrong. In an electoral sense.

            • jonway 3 hours ago

              I was looking at yearly immigration numbers and there is variation in the reporting, which is to be expected, but from what I can see, the census bureau sees a fairly stable number of immigrants (undocumented and otherwise) year over year from 2010-2025, and many sources agree, although CATO intstitute indicates a rather large increase (around %40) in this time period.

              Can you please share some information as to why you feel the 21-3 numbers to be destabilizing?

              The reason for increasing Venezuelan immigration is most likely the TPS act from 2019 ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venezuela_TPS_Act_of_2019 )

              I am an internet person, but I am aware of your general career and hold some personal respect for you which is why I am asking you fairly directly for your information. Correcting my knowledge is truly my goal and to be very blunt, I am sensitive to the issues of immigration (all types). Personally, my main concern with my country's treatment of this issue lies in the preservation of due process for these people who are seeking to become my countrymen. It doesn't surprise me that they might desire freedom and self-determination, which is something that I readily empathize with. It is important to me to treat people fairly and with dignity in civil society and especially regarding our government, and this includes citizens who are troubled by it. As such I am very interested in realizing an accurate portrayal.

            • keeda 6 hours ago

              That makes sense, and I agree with your assessments about the voting population's priorities. But maybe the inflation / immigration aspects were much more intertwined than we realized.

              Maybe (being very generous to him) Biden didn't do a tradeoff between inflation vs employment... maybe the gamble was that increased immigration would boost the economy enough that citizens were not as bothered by the immigrants.

              In other words, the very valid "its' the economy stupid" theory would imply that if people can comfortable provide for themselves and their families, they'd be less bothered by what they saw as competition for jobs.

              Unfortunately time was not on their side, and inflation did not drop fast enough.

              But there might be another angle. An interesting aspect of the economic sentiment and inflation hysteria preceding the election was that data showed that the majority of Americans thought they themselves were doing well, but other Americans were suffering. So the statistical reality was much better than the statistical perception.

              This is one reason that led to the term "vibecession" -- data belied the sentiments: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vibecession

              Many have credibly attributed this phenomenon to all the algorithm-driven ragebait content on social media, and certain news media channels (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vibecession#Media_influence_an...)

              But maybe we still underestimate the size of that effect: it exploited a critical flaw in an otherwise successful economic strategy -- its reliance on "the outsiders." During the time things were improving but still painful, the perception of these outsiders could be exploited to distract from the improvements happening and foment a backlash.

              Note it could very well have just happened by accident, but if not... that shows the power of mass perception. The events happening with media platforms leading up to the election may have been (and still are) much more consequential than we realize.

        • jonway 10 hours ago

          Could you please qualify both: the several years of chaotic annd uncontrolled immigration as well as Biden betting on employment vs inflation with the policies that you are referencing?

          For example, while I’m aware that the Biden admin ended title 42, it had only been policy for a few years, ending this policy simply removes us to the Obama era. Although I certainly don’t intend to strawman what you are saying, Obama immigration certainly wasn’t chaotic and uncontrolled. These statements don’t comport with my reading of the facts, as well as inflation, since I understand this to be a global phenomenon. I am genuinely interested

      • skopje 11 hours ago

        Half the US cheers about this. I hope we do not get a world war to stop it.

      • turnsout 14 hours ago

        I don't know, man. That is definitely true, but they didn't win by a landslide. And a lot of their edge came from the MAGA Latinx vote. This ICE/CPB action is a total self-own. That Latinx vote is going to disappear, and we've already seen the results in the 2025 elections.

        I think the right will turn on itself in 2026. We could even end up with three parties, only one of them able to obtain a majority (Democrats). There's a plausible version of the future where the Republican Party goes the way of the Whigs.

        • ryandrake 14 hours ago

          > I think the right will turn on itself in 2026.

          If they turn on themselves it will not be over immigration. This is the one issue where they are almost all in wild agreement. A massive, overwhelming majority of Republicans agree with these cruel treatment of immigrants[1].

          They might disagree on the economy or tariffs or jobs or whatever, but there's no infighting here. They fully back this cruelty.

          1: https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2025/02/07/what-amer...

          • techblueberry 14 hours ago

            The biggest division right now seems to be support Israel. And if we up the attacks in Venezuela, I do think the America first folks will get louder in their divisions.

            https://www.thefp.com/p/the-rights-existential-fight-over

          • turnsout 14 hours ago

            No, you're right—I don't think it will be over immigration. I think they'll lose in 2026 and tear themselves apart infighting about who's to blame.

            • UncleMeat 7 hours ago

              Losing in 2026 barely matters. Existing dem leadership has no desire to end the filibuster, which means we get one bill a year that is full of technocratic approaches. The Trump administration, backed by the supreme court, is accruing more and more power to simply ignore the will of Congress. Even if the dems get some guts and defund ICE, the Trump administration has already demonstrated that it is happy to just illegally distribute or withhold funds wherever it likes.

              The only way out of this is replacing dem leadership in congress with people who give a shit, winning the presidency in 2028, killing the filibuster, and then going on a serious denazification effort to restructure our institutions so that this sort of shit can't happen. Court packing. Total dismantling and rebuilding of federal law enforcement. Recreating a functional congress.

        • UncleMeat 8 hours ago

          There is no way that the republicans split. They are 100% captured by MAGA. The only possible splitting point is with the Fuentes wing, who'd just like to murder all the jews in the country in addition to all of the latinos.

      • UncleMeat 8 hours ago

        Right.

        The plan to defeat fascism can't be "never lose a single election ever for the rest of time." Political leaders did absolutely fuck all to consign Trump to the garbage bin of history in 2021 and now we've got a fascist president motivated entirely by two things: hurting as many people he hates as possible and putting up tacky gold shit in the white house.

    • alangibson 14 hours ago

      Voting is what got us in to this. This is supported by a majority of the US. You do not live in the country you think you do.

      • HeinzStuckeIt 14 hours ago

        > This is supported by a majority of the US.

        The election was fairly close. The winning candidate got elected by a coalition of people with differing views on an number of individual items within his platform. That does not equate to certain approval by the majority of the American population of any of the things the linked article recounts.

        All that said, as an American living abroad who votes left, the use of terms like “kidnapped” and “abducted” to describe immigration-enforcement actions seems really weird to me and my expat peers. There are quite a few democratic, developed countries high on freedom-ranking lists that widely deploy law enforcement to arrest and deport undocumented immigrants and visa overstayers. Sure, deplore lack of due process when actual citizens get caught in the net, but so much use of these loaded terms isn’t even about that, it’s criticizing actions against non-citizens.

        • ryandrake 14 hours ago

          > The winning candidate got elected by a coalition of people with differing views on an number of individual items within his platform. That does not equate to certain approval by the majority of the American population of any of the things the linked article recounts.

          There may be differing views on other topics among the party, but Republicans broadly support this vision of cruelty and these actions against immigrants[1] by huge margins. It's probably the one single vision they are united behind.

          1: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45859760

          • metalcrow 14 hours ago

            Your citation doesn't support your claim

            • ryandrake 14 hours ago

              - 74% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents say the Trump administration is doing the right amount to deport immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally. Another 12% say it’s doing too little and 13% say it’s doing too much.

              - Nearly nine-in-ten Republicans approve of sending additional U.S. troops to the border (88%) and increasing deportations (86%). More than six-in-ten strongly approve of these actions.

              - 80% of Republicans approve of cutting federal funds to cities and states if they do not cooperate with deportations

              - 72% of Republicans approve of suspending asylum applications, with 38% saying they strongly approve.

              • cloverich 3 hours ago

                Only that first stat aligns with what you are claiming. Wanting more border / deportations is fully inline with wanting to control immigration. Likewise cutting funds to states not supporting federal law isn't fringe. And asylum applications are clearly broken.

                You can want all of those things and still be against eg ice agents raiding a school. It would be more accurate if it focused exclusively on the more egregious ICE activities.

              • HeinzStuckeIt 14 hours ago

                It looks like the difference in the popular vote was 2,284,967 votes towards R. Do all of those 2,284,967 voters demonstrably overlap with that 86% of the polled Republicans? If not, then claiming that a majority of Americans support every incident in the linked article based on the last election, lacks basis.

                • ryandrake 13 hours ago

                  I'm not saying anything about the majority of the American population. Just that Republicans broadly support these actions. I hope we never get to the point where a majority of the overall public support this.

                  • immibis 10 hours ago

                    95% of people don't care about anything (but not always the same 95% on every issue). Revolutions are typically caused by 3% of the population outweighing the other 2%, while the 95% do nothing.

        • sgentle 12 hours ago

          Do you not think there might be a relationship between the lack of due process and the choice of terms?

          Like, maybe the defining difference between arrest and abduction is whether the action is the output of an accountable system of justice, rather than whether the people doing it are the right kind of people and the people having it done to them are the wrong kind of people.

          • HeinzStuckeIt 11 hours ago

            For some years now there has been a segment of the American left, particularly visible on social media, who believes that strictly enforcing immigration laws at all is bad. This predates the current guy, as well as his administration as the former guy. So, when I read an article by someone like the writer here whose online activity has other shibboleths of a left more extreme than found in mainstream parties in many other democracies, my assumption is he is coming out of this trend and the current events, as appalled as he is by them, is not the ultimate cause of his use of that loaded language.

        • stavros 13 hours ago

          > The election was fairly close.

          Yeah but "the totalitarian Neonazis who wanted to deploy secret police were only a slight majority" is really faint praise.

          • HeinzStuckeIt 13 hours ago

            No, my point was that in a close election that depended on a party building coalitions between heterogenous groups of voters, the people in favor of any particular action taken by the elected government may be a minority of the population, not even a slight majority.

            • stavros 12 hours ago

              Sure, but in a healthy society, such extreme opinions should never even be close enough to a minority large enough to be elected into power. Hopefully, anyway.

              • HeinzStuckeIt 12 hours ago

                Blame it on first-past-the-post. It’s just one of the many ways the Founding Fathers sowed the seeds of a politically unhealthy society.

        • metabagel 14 hours ago

          ICE are wearing masks, refusing to identify themselves, abducting citizens and non-citizens alike. They are accusing citizens of assault and then releasing them without charging - a pretty good indication that they lied.

          They are conducting warrantless searches. There is a case where they rammed the car of a U.S. citizen (clearly seen on video), promptly took her into custody, accused her of hitting them, and then released her without charging her.

          They are profiling people based on race and ethnicity.

          The abductions look like kidnappings. They don’t look like law enforcement actions.

        • queenkjuul 13 hours ago

          Many of these people are documented permanent residents or US citizens being grabbed without warrants, without being read rights, without charges, and without an opportunity to present documentation.

          That's kidnapping.

      • daseiner1 14 hours ago

        Yup immigration was arguably the concrete issue of the election and these were the campaign promises. Anyone with two brain cells to rub together knew that this is what mass deportation would look like.

        • metabagel 14 hours ago

          We already had mass deportation under Biden, and it wasn’t conducted in this manner.

      • breakyerself 11 hours ago

        A plurality of the people who voted went for Trump not a majority. He won 49.8% of the vote. When you include everyone who is eligible to vote he only got 31.8% of the total electorate. A large percentage of the electorate doesn't vote.

        • summa_tech 10 hours ago

          If you don't vote, you agree with the majority. Plain and simple! If you want to show your protest, go vote and explicitly vote with an invalid ballot or a third party. Don't give yourself the convenient "out" of staying home and then feeling like you're such a counterculture warrior for doing it.

  • fancyfredbot 13 hours ago

    https://archive.is/X33oQ for those in the UK.

  • Freedumbs 6 hours ago

    The best solution I can think of is for Illinois or any other place where ICE terrorists are deployed, should mobilize the National Guard to protect the people. They've done the opposite having the cops beat and arrest US citizens demanding justice.

  • segmondy 12 hours ago

    if you reddit, follow r/chicago it's truly heartbreaking.

  • velocity3230 2 hours ago

    I have family in the US but there's no way I'm visiting them for the foreseeable future.

    The US is quickly sliding into the thing they claim to despise: a dictatorship with a populace cowering for their safety and lacking general human rights.

    Good luck, America.

  • Freedumbs 6 hours ago

    What's really insane is GOP literally sent all these immigrants on buses and planes to places like Chicago. Now they've hired all the proud boys, patriot front, etc, paid them during shutdown, gave them camo and military gear, and authorized them to terrorize everyone. There's no legal path to justice. It's an impossible situation constructed by people who hate their neighbors and want to literally kill them. It's so much worse than this blog post can capture or any comment. This shit is heinous.

  • scoofy 6 hours ago

    When states choose nullification as a policy to ignore federal law, it’s an overt act of escalation.

    I don’t think these raids are good policy, but I won’t pretend that it’s happening in isolation. What they are doing, in large part, seems to be legal. Dressing detention up as kidnapping isn’t treating the issue in good faith.

    • jamtur01 3 hours ago

      You are familiar with the 4th Amendment? These acts are a clear violation of 4th Amendment rights, rights which extend to both citizens and non-citizens.

      • scoofy 3 hours ago

        >When do ICE agents need a warrant to arrest immigrants?

        >A judicial warrant is a legal order authorizing law enforcement’s search, seizure or arrest on private property. Judicial warrants are signed by a judge.

        >Immigration agents also use administrative warrants, which carry lower legal weight. Administrative warrants are signed by federal agents such as immigration judges or officers. These warrants allow ICE agents to arrest someone in public places. However, they don’t give officers the right to enter private property.

        >Although ICE agents are required to have a judicial warrant to enter a person’s home, they are not required to have a judicial warrant to arrest someone in public spaces, such as the immigration court building.

        >"Lander is incorrect that a judicial warrant is required," Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a senior fellow at the American Immigration Council, an immigrant-rights advocacy group, said on X.

        >An administrative warrant isn’t always required to arrest someone in public. According to immigration law, agents can arrest an immigrant without a warrant if they have "reason to believe" the immigrant is in the U.S. without authorization and "is likely to escape before a warrant can be obtained for his arrest."

        https://api.politifact.com/article/2025/jun/18/Brad-Lander-I...

        This goes on:

        >Can ICE agents arrest U.S. citizens?

        >ICE agents generally can’t arrest U.S. citizens, because they aren’t committing a civil immigration violation. However, an agent may arrest a U.S. citizen on the grounds that they believe the person is in the U.S. illegally. The person would be released after showing proof of citizenship.

        >However, Lander wasn’t arrested on immigration grounds, said Alexandra Lopez, a Chicago-based immigration attorney. The agent accused Lander of obstruction.

        >"In this scenario they are acting as federal law enforcement agents who are arresting a U.S. citizen on criminal, not immigration, grounds," Lopez said. "ICE claims they were detaining Comptroller Lander in their capacity as federal law enforcement agents, not immigration enforcement agents."

        Immigration law is complicated.

        I'm not some right-wing nutter. I'm just a lefty that thinks we're definitely shooting ourselves in the foot by really misunderstanding what's actually happening. Nullification of immigration laws is, in fact, a right that states can exercise, but it's overt nullification is absolutely an escalation that undermines public trust because it force the feds to send enforcement officers into a hostile area.

        We should fight to win the immigration debate with persuasion, in the legislature. We need to have the law on our side, and we need to have the populace on our side. Right now, we have neither. We're operating a nullification campaign, and unlike the successes of legalizing marijuana, we're losing this one. If we want to keep doing this, that's fine, but I don't want people out there pretending that lawful detentions are kidnappings. It's dumb, it's a bad look, and it kind of doesn't care about the complexities of the predicament we're in.

        This is a forum for nerds. I expect people to actually be able to google this shit.

    • Freedumbs 6 hours ago

      wtf are you talking about? they've shot us citizens, they continually beat an kidnap us citizens for no reason. care to explain any of the actions in this blog post? are you aware of the attack they carried out on an apartment building where they took everyone, mostly US citizens into custody in the middle of the night? kidnapping is the best way to describe it. it's 100% accurate. there's no way to distinguish these terrorists as they drive unmarked cars and refuse to identify themselves. anyone could dress up like them and kidnap people.

      • scoofy 5 hours ago

        Because detained and arrested is not the same as kidnapping. It’s just not even close.

        • UmGuys 4 hours ago

          KIDNAP: To abduct or confine (a person) forcibly, by threat of force, or by deceit, without the authority of law.

          Care to explain the distinction? They have authority of law?? haha It's terrorism. No crime, no warrant, no due process. Obviously it's not kidnapping by law, because no law applies to ICE.

          The apartment building scene was a mass kidnapping of US citizens. They've shot US citizens for recording their actions with live bullets, pepper balls, and gas grenade launchers. They tear gassed kids on the playground, attacked a Halloween parade, the horrors are endless.

  • abustamam 5 hours ago

    I applaud the authors use of the word "abducted" and "kidnapped."

    For some reason the media loves to just call it detained so anytime I see someone call it what it actually is deserves a gold star in my book.

    How low standards have become :(

  • fogzen 12 hours ago

    I recently saw a video of armed, masked ICE terrorists entering a daycare and forcibly dragging a teacher out in front of babies and toddlers.

    America is sick. Republicans are sick. They condone this and have made no attempt to do anything about it.

    • inemesitaffia an hour ago

      >teacher

      Citizen or legal immigrant?

      Carer or teacher?

  • Moveable_Type 14 hours ago

    can't access due to UK online safety act

    • pekim 14 hours ago

      I'm in the UK too. So I read the article courtesy of archive.is.

      https://archive.is/X33oQ

    • hexbin010 14 hours ago

      Well, technically, it's likely because he has decided to block UK IPs (or similar).

      A form of protest I assume, assuming he runs no business in the UK and no other reason to think the UK Gov has any interest in policing an .com blog run by someone who doesn't live there nor hosts the website there.

      (I'm not against that form of protest per se, but let's be clear about who's doing the blocking)

      • kasey_junk 11 hours ago

        His rationale is here https://aphyr.com/posts/395-geoblocking-multiple-localities-...

        His website links to bdsm (and hosts some very mild art). He has very real concerns and has talked to lawyers about them. I would not call it a protest rather a protective measure.

        • hexbin010 3 hours ago

          Thanks for the context. It still very much reads like activism however, rather than protecting themselves from a real and possible threat regarding aphyr.com.

          I wonder if he has consulted with lawyers and authorities from all other 193 countries in the world regarding their laws?

      • davorak 13 hours ago

        > A form of protest I assume,

        Or to avoid the fines and/or to avoid integrating some age verification service.

        Maybe symbolic since it unlikely the site would be prosecuted, even if they were in violation in some minor form. It is easy to be in violation to my understanding since it does not need to what is posted by the site owner as part of the blog but could be in the comments.

  • cteiosanu 3 hours ago

    Banana republic

  • paganel 13 hours ago

    This [1] is civil-war-inducing stuff, that's not "police", that's an army that attacks its own country's citizens. Crazy stuff, didn't think I'd get to see this happening in the States.

    [1] https://x.com/LAURA_N_ROD/status/1985412485185188067

    • actionfromafar 10 hours ago

      Later when things settle down, they will only do this to citizens who don’t pay the bribe.

  • Chockster 9 hours ago

    What causes ICE actions in Chicago to be worse than ICE actions other US cities?

    • JeremyNT 9 hours ago

      The President of the United States has a personal hatred of the city, and he has chosen specifically to target it in ways above and beyond others.

  • abvdasker 9 hours ago

    When this is all over and Trump has been consigned to history's dustbin, at the very least the public deserves to know the names of the individual federal agents and entire chain of command responsible for these atrocities. The people responsible for this wanton cruelty need to be charged and tried criminally for their actions. Nobody is going to forget this and I think a lot of Americans will demand justice and accountability once all is said and done.

  • carterschonwald 14 hours ago

    This shit is so fucked up. And at a certain level I’m disappointed that we are still trying to fix it peaceably when every day of delay, there is irreparable harm to physical wellness, mental health and rights as citizens or residents. Also science in America is fucked for the next decade.

    • galangalalgol 13 hours ago

      Violent resolution of the situation would almost certainly result in a society with even fewer freedoms. That is the historical lesson. Violent resistance to authoritarian takeovers gives them an air of legitimacy they need. That is the whole point of chicago and the attempt in Portland. They want violent resistance to justify crack downs. Instead they look like storm troopers. I am in awe of the restraint of those living in Chicago. Ice hasn't done half as much in Texas and they are getting ambushed with assault rifles. That doesn't work with their narrative of lawless blue states though. The ability of Chicagoans to resist peacefully, endure, and document these events may well be what gives the US another chance at being a democracy.

      • jeffrallen 11 hours ago

        Republicans are controlled by big business and billionaires. I agree that violence isn't the solution, because to these guys, money talks.

        What we need is a general strike. Shut the entire country down, teachers, warehouse workers, supermarket employees truckers. Everyone on the streets, refusing to make money for their billionaire bosses. When it hurts their profits, they will relent.

    • wombatpm 5 hours ago

      Next generation. You saw that Harvard cut grad admissions by 75% - even in STEM

    • monero-xmr 12 hours ago

      I didn’t realize how many scientists crossed the border without papers, claimed asylum, and became professors at research universities

      • carterschonwald 12 hours ago

        lol. It’s that the immigration policies currently being attempted plus the university grant shenanigans are destroying the stem training / research pipeline

        • monero-xmr 12 hours ago

          Strange, I know a ton of post docs and there is a lack of opportunities for them right now, both in academia and private sector

    • g-b-r 13 hours ago

      Unfortunately, violent reactions is what Trump would love, because it would allow a much bigger, probably definitive, escalation

      I think Americans should first do everything possible to bring to sanity the supporters of Trump

      • krior 12 hours ago

        > I think Americans should first do everything possible to bring to sanity the supporters of Trump

        It seems that ship left the port last november. There is barely any noticable resistance whatsoever to Trump. All this talk about freedom and when the time comes americans just fold over like lawnchairs.

        • xboxnolifes 10 hours ago

          Polling numbers and recent elections suggest there has been some shift.

  • epgui 12 hours ago

    Currently as a Canadian there are probably only four or five countries I really do not want to travel to. In no particular order: North Korea, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Russia and the United States.

    • don_neufeld 12 hours ago

      Totally get it.

      My parents (Canadian) won’t visit, and haven’t since Trump’s first term.

      Keep in mind these are people who were educated in the US (Cornell, RPI, Florida State), and as kids, we used to spend at least a month a year in the US on vacation with their college friends. So not historically haters.

      Hell, I just remembered as a kid I spent a whole summer in Chicago. IIRC We stayed in student housing while my dad finished his book (https://archive.org/details/Inside_Commodore_Dos_1984_Datamo...).

      Hottest summer of my life and no AC anywhere to be seen.

    • ragazzina 12 hours ago

      What is your main source of information about Iran?

    • bluedino 12 hours ago

      Why, exactly?

      • roxolotl 12 hours ago

        Did you read the article? Not wanting to visit countries where secret police are rounding people up, regardless of citizenship, seems like a reasonable opinion.

    • stackedinserter 12 hours ago

      Thank you for sharing this valuable information.

  • Marshferm 14 hours ago

    How can this be flagged? It’s documentary.

  • queenkjuul 13 hours ago

    This should not be flagged. This is the truth of what's happening here right now.

  • stackedinserter 12 hours ago

    The only question for OP and other chicagonians: why don't you organize and push back?

    It seems like the overwhelming majority of city population including local police doesn't support this, so go ahead and do something instead of crying on HN.

    • kasey_junk 11 hours ago

      There are protests everyday you walnut and the administration is using that as a pretense to move in honest to god military troops.

      Nearly everyone I know (including my 80 year old neighbor) has been to a protest. You can go to an organizing meeting any day of the week in any neighborhood in the city. We are all walking around with whistles for signaling when ice comes and kids are making them on 3d printers in the library.

      • ragazzina 11 hours ago

        Americans protest by writing witty signs and taking pictures for the ‘gram. No wonder they never work.

  • final_aeon 8 hours ago

    I disagree with the premise that illegal immigration is OK

    • metadope 7 hours ago

      How do you feel about legal immigration?

  • chinupbuttercup 7 hours ago

    I don't agree with all the methods used by ICE in Chicago, but I understand the problem they are trying to fix. Most of the comments on HN don't seem to think there is a problem, but that could largely be due to our limited memories and selective hearing.

    Back in 2022, the Biden administration was flying immigrant family and children secretly at night to places like Chicago. I have a friend who worked at an airlines hired for this and it is reported in the news. However, no one seemed to care. https://nypost.com/2022/04/15/biden-administration-resumes-m...

    It seems it's much easier to secretly bring people in than publicly try to remove them after it's done. Not surprising or shocking. The solution to "right" the situation could be amnesty, but that doesn't restore or build respect for the laws already on the books.

    • doganugurlu 3 hours ago

      I genuinely don’t follow.

      Had the immigrants not been moved to Chicago proper enforcement would be easier? Something about Chicago terrain or climate requires the enforcement to be this way?

  • rappatic 12 hours ago

    > Agents with guns have chased a teacher into the school where she works

    The agents actually attempted to pull over Ms. Galeano’s vehicle, but the male driver (with Galeano in the passenger seat) refused to stop despite the sirens and lights. The agents pursued the car, which sped into a shopping center, and Ms. Galeano fled the vehicle and ran into a daycare, attempting to barricade herself inside. She didn’t get all the way in and was arrested inside the vestibule. None of the kids witnessed the arrest.

    Regardless of your thoughts on immigration and ICE, if a cop tries to pull you over, and instead you decide to speed off and barricade yourself inside a daycare, you’re probably going to get arrested.

    • kasey_junk 10 hours ago

      Witnesses on the scene and the video evidence that has been released contradicts basically all of that. Perhaps we may one day know the real story if the government were ever to take any of this to trial. But given they are already in trouble for actively lying in court perhaps not.

      But you are actually wrong about what most police organizations would have done about enforcing an non-violent arrest warrant. If they were worried about the activities getting too close to a school they would specifically not follow the subject there. They would wait to get the person at a time and place that was safer. But this isn’t about public safety, as they are grabbing people from schools daily, its about intimidation and incompetence.

      • actionfromafar 10 hours ago

        And the sheer joy of agents laughing at the job. Some of them really love what they do for a living.

    • Uehreka 9 hours ago

      > Regardless of your thoughts on immigration and ICE, if a cop tries to pull you over, and instead you decide to speed off and barricade yourself inside a daycare, you’re probably going to get arrested.

      I view ICE as wholly illegitimate. If I were on the jury in this case, I would vote to acquit Ms. Galeano no matter what the prosecution said, and many people out there who have not said this online would do the same.

      There’s no need to be so fatalistic.

      • inemesitaffia an hour ago

        Immigration Enforcement is illegitimate apparently.

    • mindslight 10 hours ago

      > if a cop tries to pull you over

      But it was not a cop but rather some masked lynch posse, right? If I am being chased by a gang of lawless terrorists, you can be sure as shit that not stopping is going to be a high priority. At least until I figure out a better plan.

      • physidev 9 hours ago

        Right, it seems reasonable to run away when people wearing masks and holding guns, with no police ID in sight, are chasing you. In the moment, how can you be sure these people are really federal law enforcement?

        Even Trump's FBI is warning that people impersonating ICE agents are running around causing havoc: https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-11-06/fbi-aler...

  • cgag 14 hours ago

    A plumber working on my pipes is upset, his wages are suppressed by competition from illegals getting paid under the table, while his rent has skyrocketed, and his taxes are paying for his illegal competitors food and rent and healthcare.

    • celsoazevedo 14 hours ago

      I'm not from the US, so forgive me for what is probably a dumb question, but how is an illegal receiving money for food, rent, and healthcare? Don't you need documents (aka be legal in the country) for that?

      • itsoktocry 14 hours ago

        In many instances, no. And that's where a lot of the anger and blow back stems from.

        • don_neufeld 11 hours ago
        • celsoazevedo 13 hours ago

          It would be interesting to see how that works. Even here in Europe where we usually have a strong(er) social net, the state wouldn't give me a benefit without going through a process requiring documents to prove who I am, my nationality, etc.

          There are food banks and stuff like that, but that's usually from charities.

          • kdmtctl 9 hours ago

            They are not receiving any benefits. They are not legal literally. Work for cash. No safety net except peers who are often abusive. There are lot of this in EU, just not this visible.

          • don_neufeld 13 hours ago

            Parent comment is talking about working “under the table”, receiving cash off the books for work done. Not government benefits.

            • celsoazevedo 12 hours ago

              I don't think "illegals" means "people receiving money under the table", especially in the context of this thread. It sounds like they're referring to people living illegally in the country. Hence my question about "illegals" receiving benefits when usually we need to have documents to receive any state/government benefit.

              • don_neufeld 11 hours ago

                I was referring to the same people. The reason I said that is that employing someone who’s undocumented exposes the employer to enforcement risk, so many choose to keep the relationship hidden.

                That’s how most undocumented people in the country survive: by working for employers who are breaking the law.

                In terms of undocumented individuals benefits, that’s a common and almost entirely false claim.

                While it is a complicated space (because of State vs Federal), the vast majority of “Illegals” are not eligible for the vast majority of benefits in the United States, with the exception of some emergency services.

                There are some exceptions for victims of human trafficking and there like.

                If you want to dig in: https://www.nilc.org/resources/overview-immeligfedprograms/

    • turnsout 14 hours ago

      Definitely sounds like a real story

    • miltonlost 14 hours ago

      tell your plumber he's an idiot because his taxes are not paying for that, and his rent is not skyrocketing because of "illegals" (other than the illegal collusion of rental prices via price algorithm fixing).

      • lurk2 7 hours ago

        > and his rent is not skyrocketing because of "illegals"

        Why is it skyrocketing?