Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, resist! That's not the law. The government has the burden of proof.
You’re not a POC, are you?
NP. I am a “POC” (I hate this term) lawyer and I agree with this in principle. But I’m not scared of being “disappeared” or walking around in general. I live in NYC and walk around all the time without a wallet (including ID), and have no plans of changing this.
People are being hysterical. Many years ago I studied abroad in Russia, which is actually a country where authorities can and will stop foreign-looking people (or anyone) and ask for your papers. This is not anything even remotely close to that.
I’m not crazy about the term either — but I do recognize that some of us are treated differently vs others, especially by law enforcement, and that can make a difference in terms of both safety, and the likelihood that “the law” and those enforcing it will be at least somewhat neutral, or even somewhat protective. Perhaps being a lawyer yourself gives you some sense of protection as well?
When I lived in NYC, I, too, walked around without ID, as I have throughout my life in DC. The current Trump/Miller/ICE administration has changed that for me. I don’t expect a piece of paper to necessarily save me, but it’s truly not hysterical to understand that police and ICE may treat me very differently from the way they’d treat someone white, blonde, and apparently the right kind of American. I’m old enough to remember what happened to the now-exonerated Central Park Five — thanks in large part to the EO happy guy in the White House.
Why do you guys think white people are somehow safe from all of this? Yes Trump is racist but he also hates any white person who isn’t MAGA. He has threatened Gavin Newsom as well and he is white and a powerful elected official. Nobody is safe.
“German Teens Say They Were Strip-Searched and Imprisoned After Landing in Hawaii for Graduation Trip”
https://people.com/german-teens-detained-hawaii-during-post-graduation-trip-11719907
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, resist! That's not the law. The government has the burden of proof.
You’re not a POC, are you?
NP. I am a “POC” (I hate this term) lawyer and I agree with this in principle. But I’m not scared of being “disappeared” or walking around in general. I live in NYC and walk around all the time without a wallet (including ID), and have no plans of changing this.
People are being hysterical. Many years ago I studied abroad in Russia, which is actually a country where authorities can and will stop foreign-looking people (or anyone) and ask for your papers. This is not anything even remotely close to that.
I’m not crazy about the term either — but I do recognize that some of us are treated differently vs others, especially by law enforcement, and that can make a difference in terms of both safety, and the likelihood that “the law” and those enforcing it will be at least somewhat neutral, or even somewhat protective. Perhaps being a lawyer yourself gives you some sense of protection as well?
When I lived in NYC, I, too, walked around without ID, as I have throughout my life in DC. The current Trump/Miller/ICE administration has changed that for me. I don’t expect a piece of paper to necessarily save me, but it’s truly not hysterical to understand that police and ICE may treat me very differently from the way they’d treat someone white, blonde, and apparently the right kind of American. I’m old enough to remember what happened to the now-exonerated Central Park Five — thanks in large part to the EO happy guy in the White House.
Why do you guys think white people are somehow safe from all of this? Yes Trump is racist but he also hates any white person who isn’t MAGA. He has threatened Gavin Newsom as well and he is white and a powerful elected official. Nobody is safe.
“German Teens Say They Were Strip-Searched and Imprisoned After Landing in Hawaii for Graduation Trip”
https://people.com/german-teens-detained-hawaii-during-post-graduation-trip-11719907
Anonymous wrote:If you carry your passport everywhere you go, are any of you more concerned about it getting lost or stolen than you actually needing it? I’m asking as a serious question. That would be my concern with having my passport on me everywhere, but I’ve lost my license more than once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, resist! That's not the law. The government has the burden of proof.
You’re not a POC, are you?
NP. I am a “POC” (I hate this term) lawyer and I agree with this in principle. But I’m not scared of being “disappeared” or walking around in general. I live in NYC and walk around all the time without a wallet (including ID), and have no plans of changing this.
People are being hysterical. Many years ago I studied abroad in Russia, which is actually a country where authorities can and will stop foreign-looking people (or anyone) and ask for your papers. This is not anything even remotely close to that.
I’m not crazy about the term either — but I do recognize that some of us are treated differently vs others, especially by law enforcement, and that can make a difference in terms of both safety, and the likelihood that “the law” and those enforcing it will be at least somewhat neutral, or even somewhat protective. Perhaps being a lawyer yourself gives you some sense of protection as well?
When I lived in NYC, I, too, walked around without ID, as I have throughout my life in DC. The current Trump/Miller/ICE administration has changed that for me. I don’t expect a piece of paper to necessarily save me, but it’s truly not hysterical to understand that police and ICE may treat me very differently from the way they’d treat someone white, blonde, and apparently the right kind of American. I’m old enough to remember what happened to the now-exonerated Central Park Five — thanks in large part to the EO happy guy in the White House.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m getting my Real ID next month, so I figure that should be good enough when I’m out shopping etc. Maybe I’ll take a video of my passport since I usually have my phone on me and don’t carry my wallet if I’m just walking in the neighborhood.
Real ID doesn't prove citizenship.
If that is true then that means the average American citizen has absolutely no way to protect themselves against a random ICE raid where they could scoop anyone up and claim they are here illegally, detain you, send you off to some black site in South Sudan, or central America or Djibouti. Anyone.
This is Trump's America.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, resist! That's not the law. The government has the burden of proof.
You’re not a POC, are you?
NP. I am a “POC” (I hate this term) lawyer and I agree with this in principle. But I’m not scared of being “disappeared” or walking around in general. I live in NYC and walk around all the time without a wallet (including ID), and have no plans of changing this.
People are being hysterical. Many years ago I studied abroad in Russia, which is actually a country where authorities can and will stop foreign-looking people (or anyone) and ask for your papers. This is not anything even remotely close to that.
lol better start carrying your papers on you. Can’t wait to see you try to lawyer your way out of being arrested by a private in the 82nd or mask ICE agents.
The Trump administration is planning to conduct major immigration raids in three U.S. cities per week, according to three sources familiar with the planning. One of the sources described the operations as “all hands on deck.”
Operations began Sunday in Chicago, New York City began Tuesday, and three officials said they were planning for the next operation to take place in Aurora, Colorado, on Thursday. However, two sources familiar with the planning said Wednesday the Aurora operation was called off temporarily due to media leaks. One source said the leaks posed an operational security risk for officers involved.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/are-cities-ice-raids-are-taking-place-rcna189390
PP here. Yeah, I see absolutely no need to do that. My point is that the immigration raids - and I am not addressing the merits of those and due process issues they might raise - are exactly that, raids, where ICE thinks it can pick up people without papers. Like immigration court. There aren’t ICE officers swarming the streets of Midtown and the subway looking for random people to detain. I feel perfectly, 100% safe from immigration officers in my daily life.
I recognize that even U.S. citizens are having issues at borders and airports, but I maintain that American citizens “of color” systematically being detained on the streets and ordered to show papers while going about their business is not a thing.
Coming soon to a neighborhood block near you. This is happening people, unless the public draws a red line and says absolutely not. If ICE wants to get warrants and target specific people, then I am all for it. But when we are at the point where an exchange like this is taking place that people have to carry papers, we are no longer the USA.
I disagree that this is happening or imminent. I’m not denying that they’re conducting aggressive immigration raids, I’m saying that I don’t think we’re anywhere near a point that random American citizens are going to be targeted in the streets by ICE and should be carrying proof of citizenship as a proactive measure. I think that is hysteria.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always carry ID. Female WASP. Exception would be walking in the neighborhood.
And, when I lived and worked overseas, I always carried my passport.
+1
They run your ID and if it’s up to date, accurate and matches your face and other IDs, yours all set.
If they run it and it’s fake that’s illegal and you can get fined, confiscated, jailed and more.
As an American, or someone visiting, there should never be a situation where I am stopped without cause to have an ID run. Do you see how absurd this is?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m getting my Real ID next month, so I figure that should be good enough when I’m out shopping etc. Maybe I’ll take a video of my passport since I usually have my phone on me and don’t carry my wallet if I’m just walking in the neighborhood.
Real ID doesn't prove citizenship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, resist! That's not the law. The government has the burden of proof.
You’re not a POC, are you?
NP. I am a “POC” (I hate this term) lawyer and I agree with this in principle. But I’m not scared of being “disappeared” or walking around in general. I live in NYC and walk around all the time without a wallet (including ID), and have no plans of changing this.
People are being hysterical. Many years ago I studied abroad in Russia, which is actually a country where authorities can and will stop foreign-looking people (or anyone) and ask for your papers. This is not anything even remotely close to that.
Anonymous wrote:If you carry your passport everywhere you go, are any of you more concerned about it getting lost or stolen than you actually needing it? I’m asking as a serious question. That would be my concern with having my passport on me everywhere, but I’ve lost my license more than once.