Tufts student detained by ICE

Anonymous
https://www.al.com/news/tuscaloosa/2025/03/fiance-of-alireza-doroudi-alabama-student-detained-by-ice-was-planning-wedding-now-fights-for-freedom-it-was-traumatizing.html?outputType=amp

Link to article on Bama PhD student from Iran who was grabbed out of bed by ICE at 3am and quickly taken to a detention center in Louisiana.

No record of criminal activity or political activities.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Trump and Homan can't deliver on the mass deportations they promised for months, so they're going for "shock and awe".

The most disgusting thing about this is watching people scream about law and order while subverting the rule of law.


Exactly this! People writing lengthy posts should understand ⬆️
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:She wrote an op-ed. I don’t want to live in a country where people here legally are told to “keep your head down” instead of participating in our society.

Everyone in the US has first amendment rights and we are better off when people aren’t afraid if using them.


This.
I’m tired of MAGA hypocrisy. Free speech is free speech.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:https://www.al.com/news/tuscaloosa/2025/03/fiance-of-alireza-doroudi-alabama-student-detained-by-ice-was-planning-wedding-now-fights-for-freedom-it-was-traumatizing.html?outputType=amp

Link to article on Bama PhD student from Iran who was grabbed out of bed by ICE at 3am and quickly taken to a detention center in Louisiana.

No record of criminal activity or political activities.


His visa was revoked under the Biden administration for reckless driving and they are getting around to finally deporting him.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:https://www.al.com/news/tuscaloosa/2025/03/fiance-of-alireza-doroudi-alabama-student-detained-by-ice-was-planning-wedding-now-fights-for-freedom-it-was-traumatizing.html?outputType=amp

Link to article on Bama PhD student from Iran who was grabbed out of bed by ICE at 3am and quickly taken to a detention center in Louisiana.

No record of criminal activity or political activities.


His visa was revoked under the Biden administration for reckless driving and they are getting around to finally deporting him.

So the process of revoke the visa and have the person leave didn't work?
Anonymous
What group is supplying these names to Rubio? I have heard it is a pro Israeli group.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:What group is supplying these names to Rubio? I have heard it is a pro Israeli group.


The group is Canary Mission. Take a look: https://canarymission.org/.

See this thread. https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1265689.page
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:https://www.al.com/news/tuscaloosa/2025/03/fiance-of-alireza-doroudi-alabama-student-detained-by-ice-was-planning-wedding-now-fights-for-freedom-it-was-traumatizing.html?outputType=amp

Link to article on Bama PhD student from Iran who was grabbed out of bed by ICE at 3am and quickly taken to a detention center in Louisiana.

No record of criminal activity or political activities.


His visa was revoked under the Biden administration for reckless driving and they are getting around to finally deporting him.

So the process of revoke the visa and have the person leave didn't work?


Immigration enforcement under Biden was lax.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:She has no future in the U.S. Even if immigration court stops her deportation, she has no pathway to legal status here. She will never get a H1B visa, she will never get a green card let alone citizenship. If her deportation is stopped she will live as a person in limbo in the U.S. if that’s her choice instead of returning to Turkey each to their own.


How is this irrelevant? She was a PhD student or postdoctoral student trying to get an education she can’t get in her home country.
That might be an unfamiliar concept to you - that someone would emigrate just to get a better education and not to try to become a US citizen.


You can’t be a phd student in Turkey? If you are trying to emigrate to get a better education keep your head down and not create waves in your host country. That’s not an unfamiliar concept either. Her time in the US is at an end. If her deportation is stopped she can’t study, get a job, do anything here. Cut her losses and go back to her own country, which somehow I bet she doesn’t want to do.


The higher the level of education, the more specialized it becomes. Obtaining a PhD means 4-5 years of focus and research on a topic that her supervisor would be an expert on. That expertise was probably not available in her home country because research dollars can be limited or the academic culture overall focuses more on teaching and not research.

I don’t see why she wouldn’t continue her studies at Tufts once she’s released. “Her time in the US is at the end”. Why so dramatic? That, and your aggressive tone, gives the impression that you’re actually a small, irrelevant, person in real life who needs to pump himself (or herself) up with bold dramatic statements like “Her time in the US is at the end”. (Quake, shiver…)





DP

The individuals callously indifferent or even gleeful over her abduction would squeal in outrage if their people were being targeted and spirited to a domestic blacksite for indeterminate periods of time. And they know it. But they live and breathe on a perverse belief that they are better than …
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:She has no future in the U.S. Even if immigration court stops her deportation, she has no pathway to legal status here. She will never get a H1B visa, she will never get a green card let alone citizenship. If her deportation is stopped she will live as a person in limbo in the U.S. if that’s her choice instead of returning to Turkey each to their own.


How is this irrelevant? She was a PhD student or postdoctoral student trying to get an education she can’t get in her home country.
That might be an unfamiliar concept to you - that someone would emigrate just to get a better education and not to try to become a US citizen.


You can’t be a phd student in Turkey? If you are trying to emigrate to get a better education keep your head down and not create waves in your host country. That’s not an unfamiliar concept either. Her time in the US is at an end. If her deportation is stopped she can’t study, get a job, do anything here. Cut her losses and go back to her own country, which somehow I bet she doesn’t want to do.


The higher the level of education, the more specialized it becomes. Obtaining a PhD means 4-5 years of focus and research on a topic that her supervisor would be an expert on. That expertise was probably not available in her home country because research dollars can be limited or the academic culture overall focuses more on teaching and not research.

I don’t see why she wouldn’t continue her studies at Tufts once she’s released. “Her time in the US is at the end”. Why so dramatic? That, and your aggressive tone, gives the impression that you’re actually a small, irrelevant, person in real life who needs to pump himself (or herself) up with bold dramatic statements like “Her time in the US is at the end”. (Quake, shiver…)





DP

The individuals callously indifferent or even gleeful over her abduction would squeal in outrage if their people were being targeted and spirited to a domestic blacksite for indeterminate periods of time. And they know it. But they live and breathe on a perverse belief that they are better than …


No, they just behave better than... Stir the pot, sometimes the pot gets sick of it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:She has no future in the U.S. Even if immigration court stops her deportation, she has no pathway to legal status here. She will never get a H1B visa, she will never get a green card let alone citizenship. If her deportation is stopped she will live as a person in limbo in the U.S. if that’s her choice instead of returning to Turkey each to their own.


How is this irrelevant? She was a PhD student or postdoctoral student trying to get an education she can’t get in her home country.
That might be an unfamiliar concept to you - that someone would emigrate just to get a better education and not to try to become a US citizen.


You can’t be a phd student in Turkey? If you are trying to emigrate to get a better education keep your head down and not create waves in your host country. That’s not an unfamiliar concept either. Her time in the US is at an end. If her deportation is stopped she can’t study, get a job, do anything here. Cut her losses and go back to her own country, which somehow I bet she doesn’t want to do.


The higher the level of education, the more specialized it becomes. Obtaining a PhD means 4-5 years of focus and research on a topic that her supervisor would be an expert on. That expertise was probably not available in her home country because research dollars can be limited or the academic culture overall focuses more on teaching and not research.

I don’t see why she wouldn’t continue her studies at Tufts once she’s released. “Her time in the US is at the end”. Why so dramatic? That, and your aggressive tone, gives the impression that you’re actually a small, irrelevant, person in real life who needs to pump himself (or herself) up with bold dramatic statements like “Her time in the US is at the end”. (Quake, shiver…)





DP

The individuals callously indifferent or even gleeful over her abduction would squeal in outrage if their people were being targeted and spirited to a domestic blacksite for indeterminate periods of time. And they know it. But they live and breathe on a perverse belief that they are better than …


No, they just behave better than... Stir the pot, sometimes the pot gets sick of it.


If you don’t like the U.S. Constitution, you can leave the country. Most of us believe in due process and first amendment rights. We will stay and fight.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:She has no future in the U.S. Even if immigration court stops her deportation, she has no pathway to legal status here. She will never get a H1B visa, she will never get a green card let alone citizenship. If her deportation is stopped she will live as a person in limbo in the U.S. if that’s her choice instead of returning to Turkey each to their own.


How is this irrelevant? She was a PhD student or postdoctoral student trying to get an education she can’t get in her home country.
That might be an unfamiliar concept to you - that someone would emigrate just to get a better education and not to try to become a US citizen.


You can’t be a phd student in Turkey? If you are trying to emigrate to get a better education keep your head down and not create waves in your host country. That’s not an unfamiliar concept either. Her time in the US is at an end. If her deportation is stopped she can’t study, get a job, do anything here. Cut her losses and go back to her own country, which somehow I bet she doesn’t want to do.


The higher the level of education, the more specialized it becomes. Obtaining a PhD means 4-5 years of focus and research on a topic that her supervisor would be an expert on. That expertise was probably not available in her home country because research dollars can be limited or the academic culture overall focuses more on teaching and not research.

I don’t see why she wouldn’t continue her studies at Tufts once she’s released. “Her time in the US is at the end”. Why so dramatic? That, and your aggressive tone, gives the impression that you’re actually a small, irrelevant, person in real life who needs to pump himself (or herself) up with bold dramatic statements like “Her time in the US is at the end”. (Quake, shiver…)





DP

The individuals callously indifferent or even gleeful over her abduction would squeal in outrage if their people were being targeted and spirited to a domestic blacksite for indeterminate periods of time. And they know it. But they live and breathe on a perverse belief that they are better than …


No, they just behave better than... Stir the pot, sometimes the pot gets sick of it.


If you don’t like the U.S. Constitution, you can leave the country. Most of us believe in due process and first amendment rights. We will stay and fight.


Good luck "fighting" against lawful activity you just don't like. Non-citizens run their mouths, demonstrate, and otherwise agitate against this country or its allies at their own risk. They have no absolute rights to residence. They can either conduct themselves prudently, or not. There may be consequences, entirely legal consequences, for annoying the host government.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:She has no future in the U.S. Even if immigration court stops her deportation, she has no pathway to legal status here. She will never get a H1B visa, she will never get a green card let alone citizenship. If her deportation is stopped she will live as a person in limbo in the U.S. if that’s her choice instead of returning to Turkey each to their own.


How is this irrelevant? She was a PhD student or postdoctoral student trying to get an education she can’t get in her home country.
That might be an unfamiliar concept to you - that someone would emigrate just to get a better education and not to try to become a US citizen.


You can’t be a phd student in Turkey? If you are trying to emigrate to get a better education keep your head down and not create waves in your host country. That’s not an unfamiliar concept either. Her time in the US is at an end. If her deportation is stopped she can’t study, get a job, do anything here. Cut her losses and go back to her own country, which somehow I bet she doesn’t want to do.


The higher the level of education, the more specialized it becomes. Obtaining a PhD means 4-5 years of focus and research on a topic that her supervisor would be an expert on. That expertise was probably not available in her home country because research dollars can be limited or the academic culture overall focuses more on teaching and not research.

I don’t see why she wouldn’t continue her studies at Tufts once she’s released. “Her time in the US is at the end”. Why so dramatic? That, and your aggressive tone, gives the impression that you’re actually a small, irrelevant, person in real life who needs to pump himself (or herself) up with bold dramatic statements like “Her time in the US is at the end”. (Quake, shiver…)





DP

The individuals callously indifferent or even gleeful over her abduction would squeal in outrage if their people were being targeted and spirited to a domestic blacksite for indeterminate periods of time. And they know it. But they live and breathe on a perverse belief that they are better than …


No, they just behave better than... Stir the pot, sometimes the pot gets sick of it.


If you don’t like the U.S. Constitution, you can leave the country. Most of us believe in due process and first amendment rights. We will stay and fight.


Good luck "fighting" against lawful activity you just don't like. Non-citizens run their mouths, demonstrate, and otherwise agitate against this country or its allies at their own risk. They have no absolute rights to residence. They can either conduct themselves prudently, or not. There may be consequences, entirely legal consequences, for annoying the host government.


Here’s a clue. If a federal public servant is covering his face and refusing to identify himself, his activity is probably not lawful. We don’t do extrajudicial abductions in the United States.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:She has no future in the U.S. Even if immigration court stops her deportation, she has no pathway to legal status here. She will never get a H1B visa, she will never get a green card let alone citizenship. If her deportation is stopped she will live as a person in limbo in the U.S. if that’s her choice instead of returning to Turkey each to their own.


How is this irrelevant? She was a PhD student or postdoctoral student trying to get an education she can’t get in her home country.
That might be an unfamiliar concept to you - that someone would emigrate just to get a better education and not to try to become a US citizen.


You can’t be a phd student in Turkey? If you are trying to emigrate to get a better education keep your head down and not create waves in your host country. That’s not an unfamiliar concept either. Her time in the US is at an end. If her deportation is stopped she can’t study, get a job, do anything here. Cut her losses and go back to her own country, which somehow I bet she doesn’t want to do.


The higher the level of education, the more specialized it becomes. Obtaining a PhD means 4-5 years of focus and research on a topic that her supervisor would be an expert on. That expertise was probably not available in her home country because research dollars can be limited or the academic culture overall focuses more on teaching and not research.

I don’t see why she wouldn’t continue her studies at Tufts once she’s released. “Her time in the US is at the end”. Why so dramatic? That, and your aggressive tone, gives the impression that you’re actually a small, irrelevant, person in real life who needs to pump himself (or herself) up with bold dramatic statements like “Her time in the US is at the end”. (Quake, shiver…)





DP

The individuals callously indifferent or even gleeful over her abduction would squeal in outrage if their people were being targeted and spirited to a domestic blacksite for indeterminate periods of time. And they know it. But they live and breathe on a perverse belief that they are better than …


No, they just behave better than... Stir the pot, sometimes the pot gets sick of it.


If you don’t like the U.S. Constitution, you can leave the country. Most of us believe in due process and first amendment rights. We will stay and fight.


Good luck "fighting" against lawful activity you just don't like. Non-citizens run their mouths, demonstrate, and otherwise agitate against this country or its allies at their own risk. They have no absolute rights to residence. They can either conduct themselves prudently, or not. There may be consequences, entirely legal consequences, for annoying the host government.


Oh, the hilarious irony …
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