• Florida college students scared, on edge over campus police's cooperati

    From Activism Has A Price@21:1/5 to All on Sat Apr 19 19:39:01 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.immigration, alt.college.democrats, fl.general
    XPost: sac.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    MIAMI — After Florida International University’s police department
    entered into an agreement with the federal government to carry out
    immigration enforcement on campus, some students say they are terrified.

    “It’s scary and nerve-racking,” said an undergraduate at the university.

    The student, who's not being identified because he lacks legal
    immigration status, told NBC News he came to the U.S. when he was 5 with
    his family after they were threatened by gangs in their native El
    Salvador. He said he was very focused in middle school and high school
    and took many Advanced Placement classes, knowing he had to work harder
    to have a shot at college.

    Now, the student is not sure if he'll continue at FIU next year. For
    now, he said he’s avoiding certain parts of the university he considers risky. “I've been trying to not go to the main areas of campus where
    police are,” the student said.

    FIU is one of a number of universities in Florida that have signed
    agreements with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement under the
    287(g) program, which trains local law enforcement officers to
    interrogate immigrants and detain them for potential deportation.

    In addition to FIU, the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida
    State University in Tallahassee, the University of North Florida in Jacksonville, Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, and the
    University of South Florida in Tampa have in place agreements with ICE.

    Florida is the state with the most local agencies signing 287(g)
    agreements, including all of Florida’s 67 county sheriffs. Dozens of
    cities have signed on, including some with large immigrant populations
    like Hialeah, Miami Springs and West Miami.

    It's part of Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis' sweeping immigration measures, which are aligned with President Donald Trump’s pledge to
    carry out the largest deportation effort in U.S. history.

    “Florida is setting the example for states in combating illegal
    immigration and working with the Trump administration to restore the
    rule of law,” DeSantis said in February about the agreements with ICE.
    “By allowing our state agents and law enforcement officers to be trained
    and approved by ICE, Florida will now have more enforcement personnel
    deputized to assist federal partners. That means deportations can be
    carried out more efficiently, making our communities safer as illegal
    aliens are removed.”

    At FIU, where over 63% of the student population is Hispanic or Latino,
    the cooperation has alarmed many. Early in the week, many FIU students
    on campus seemed unaware of the new collaboration with ICE, but among
    those at risk of deportation, the fear is palpable.

    Faculty and students have mobilized and held protests against FIU’s
    decision to collaborate with ICE. At a protest Tuesday, students held a
    banner that read “No ICE @FIU.”

    In an emailed statement, FIU said their police department “has signed a cooperation agreement with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in compliance with Governor Ron DeSantis’ directive to law enforcement agencies.”

    ICE did not immediately respond to a request to comment.

    On Friday at a faculty senate session, professors issued a resolution
    asking FIU President Jeanette Nuñez and the campus police chief to
    withdraw from the agreement with ICE. Nuñez was DeSantis' former
    lieutenant governor who became FIU’s acting president in February,
    following a board vote requested by the governor.

    ‘I try to act normal’
    After nearly four years as an undergraduate at FIU, a student said he
    was looking over his shoulder.

    The student requested anonymity because he lacks legal immigration
    status. He came with his parents from Central America when he was 9.

    “It feels like I’m being persecuted even though I haven’t done anything,” he said. “I feel more anxious. I don’t know why but I see
    more police on campus recently. I try to act normal and dress nice.”

    The student said that when he and other undocumented students found out
    about the collaboration, “everyone was scared. People cried. Everyone
    feels it’s unfair.”

    One FIU professor described the atmosphere as "reminiscent" of Latin
    American universities and what it was like in the Soviet Union. The
    professor's name is being withheld because they're not authorized to
    speak in areas outside their expertise.

    “This is how it used to be in Latin America. The government would look
    into the university to make sure that you were towing the line,” the professor said. “We’re going in that direction now.”

    “The campus police is here to protect students from crime. They are not supposed to enforce the policy of the federal government. Immigration
    policy is federal policy,” the professor said.

    The cooperation with ICE comes as the Trump administration has cracked
    down on some foreign students, revoking their visas and ordering them to
    leave the country immediately. At least 36 students in Florida have been stripped of their visas, 18 at FIU.

    The administration's actions are a stark departure from the policy set
    in place over a decade ago that restricted federal immigration agencies
    from carrying out immigration enforcement in sensitive locations like
    schools and churches. The Trump administration ended that guidance in
    January, making students on college campuses potential immigration
    enforcement targets.

    Universities in Florida have seen a number of changes under DeSantis.
    Teaching critical race theory has been banned; centers to promote
    center-right ideas have been created; a recent law limits the content
    taught at public universities; and multiple faculty members have been terminated after the state adopted post-tenure reviews of professors.

    The Dream.US, an organization that awards college scholarships to
    "Dreamers" — young adults who've been in the U.S. since they were very
    young but lack legal immigration status — announced it's withdrawing scholarships for hundreds of students in eight Florida universities.
    Gaby Pacheco, president of Dream.US, cited Florida's decision to end
    in-state tuition for students without legal immigration status — which
    takes effect in July — as well as the universities' 286(g) agreements
    with ICE. “We do not feel our students will be safe on campus," Pacheco
    told the Miami Herald.

    Melissa Tavara and Katerin Crespo, both theater majors at FIU, said they worried about how the campus police will carry out their new duties as
    they walked across campus on a recent afternoon. Both are U.S. citizens
    but worry about racial profiling.

    “How else would you look for these students,” said Tavara.

    Crespo said, “This creates fear. It’s an international school. We are supposed to be a melting pot.”

    Things change, shut your mouth and know your place. Otherwise, take your melting pot and go back where you came from.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/ice-florida-international-university-immigration-student-visas-rcna201906

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dark Brandon@21:1/5 to Activism Has A Price on Sat Apr 19 14:25:42 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.immigration, alt.college.democrats, fl.general
    XPost: sac.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    On 4/19/2025 1:39 PM, Activism Has A Price wrote:
    MIAMI — After Florida International University’s police department entered into an agreement with the federal government to carry out immigration enforcement on campus, some students say they are terrified.

    “It’s scary and nerve-racking,” said an undergraduate at the university.

    The student, who's not being identified because he lacks legal
    immigration status, told NBC News he came to the U.S. when he was 5 with
    his family after they were threatened by gangs in their native El
    Salvador. He said he was very focused in middle school and high school
    and took many Advanced Placement classes, knowing he had to work harder
    to have a shot at college.

    Now, the student is not sure if he'll continue at FIU next year. For
    now, he said he’s avoiding certain parts of the university he considers risky. “I've been trying to not go to the main areas of campus where
    police are,” the student said.

    FIU is one of a number of universities in Florida that have signed
    agreements with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement under the
    287(g) program, which trains local law enforcement officers to
    interrogate immigrants and detain them for potential deportation.

    In addition to FIU, the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida
    State University in Tallahassee, the University of North Florida in Jacksonville, Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, and the
    University of South Florida in Tampa have in place agreements with ICE.

    Florida is the state with the most local agencies signing 287(g)
    agreements, including all of Florida’s 67 county sheriffs. Dozens of
    cities have signed on, including some with large immigrant populations
    like Hialeah, Miami Springs and West Miami.

    It's part of Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis' sweeping immigration measures, which are aligned with President Donald Trump’s pledge to
    carry out the largest deportation effort in U.S. history.

    “Florida is setting the example for states in combating illegal
    immigration and working with the Trump administration to restore the
    rule of law,” DeSantis said in February about the agreements with ICE. “By allowing our state agents and law enforcement officers to be trained and approved by ICE, Florida will now have more enforcement personnel deputized to assist federal partners. That means deportations can be
    carried out more efficiently, making our communities safer as illegal
    aliens are removed.”

    At FIU, where over 63% of the student population is Hispanic or Latino,
    the cooperation has alarmed many. Early in the week, many FIU students
    on campus seemed unaware of the new collaboration with ICE, but among
    those at risk of deportation, the fear is palpable.

    Faculty and students have mobilized and held protests against FIU’s decision to collaborate with ICE. At a protest Tuesday, students held a banner that read “No ICE @FIU.”

    In an emailed statement, FIU said their police department “has signed a cooperation agreement with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in compliance with Governor Ron DeSantis’ directive to law enforcement agencies.”

    ICE did not immediately respond to a request to comment.

    On Friday at a faculty senate session, professors issued a resolution
    asking FIU President Jeanette Nuñez and the campus police chief to
    withdraw from the agreement with ICE. Nuñez was DeSantis' former
    lieutenant governor who became FIU’s acting president in February, following a board vote requested by the governor.

    ‘I try to act normal’
    After nearly four years as an undergraduate at FIU, a student said he
    was looking over his shoulder.

    The student requested anonymity because he lacks legal immigration
    status. He came with his parents from Central America when he was 9.

    “It feels like I’m being persecuted even though I haven’t done anything,” he said. “I feel more anxious. I don’t know why but I see more police on campus recently. I try to act normal and dress nice.”

    The student said that when he and other undocumented students found out
    about the collaboration, “everyone was scared. People cried. Everyone
    feels it’s unfair.”

    One FIU professor described the atmosphere as "reminiscent" of Latin
    American universities and what it was like in the Soviet Union. The professor's name is being withheld because they're not authorized to
    speak in areas outside their expertise.

    “This is how it used to be in Latin America. The government would look
    into the university to make sure that you were towing the line,” the professor said. “We’re going in that direction now.”

    “The campus police is here to protect students from crime. They are not supposed to enforce the policy of the federal government. Immigration
    policy is federal policy,” the professor said.

    The cooperation with ICE comes as the Trump administration has cracked
    down on some foreign students, revoking their visas and ordering them to leave the country immediately. At least 36 students in Florida have been stripped of their visas, 18 at FIU.

    The administration's actions are a stark departure from the policy set
    in place over a decade ago that restricted federal immigration agencies
    from carrying out immigration enforcement in sensitive locations like
    schools and churches. The Trump administration ended that guidance in January, making students on college campuses potential immigration enforcement targets.

    Universities in Florida have seen a number of changes under DeSantis. Teaching critical race theory has been banned; centers to promote center-right ideas have been created; a recent law limits the content
    taught at public universities; and multiple faculty members have been terminated after the state adopted post-tenure reviews of professors.

    The Dream.US, an organization that awards college scholarships to
    "Dreamers" — young adults who've been in the U.S. since they were very young but lack legal immigration status — announced it's withdrawing scholarships for hundreds of students in eight Florida universities.
    Gaby Pacheco, president of Dream.US, cited Florida's decision to end
    in-state tuition for students without legal immigration status — which takes effect in July — as well as the universities' 286(g) agreements
    with ICE. “We do not feel our students will be safe on campus," Pacheco told the Miami Herald.

    Melissa Tavara and Katerin Crespo, both theater majors at FIU, said they worried about how the campus police will carry out their new duties as
    they walked across campus on a recent afternoon. Both are U.S. citizens
    but worry about racial profiling.

    “How else would you look for these students,” said Tavara.

    Crespo said, “This creates fear. It’s an international school. We are supposed to be a melting pot.”

    Things change, shut your mouth and know your place. Otherwise, take your melting pot and go back where you came from.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/ice-florida-international-university-immigration-student-visas-rcna201906


    All this could have been avoided if the Democrats had not opened the
    floodgates to tens of millions of illegal invaders under the Biden-Mayorkas-Harris Administration. Cuban born DHS Secretary
    Alejandro Mayorkas, a Hispanic son of communists who had migrated to
    Cuba from behind the Iron Curtain and then came to the U.S. as
    "refugees" opened the borders and helped millions of Africans, Hatians,
    and other invaders come through Panama's Darien Gap with the aid of
    Mexico through Mayorkas's Hebrew Immigration Aid Society and his
    position as DHS "Chief". The current anti-illegal-invader sentiment in
    the U.S. is the predictable backlash to the Democrat Party's Great
    Replacement campaign against White Americans. Governor DeSantis should
    be praised for not letting people like Biden and Alejandro Mayorkas turn Florida into a mirror image of Communist Cuba both racially and socio-economically.



    --
    "When people get used to preferential treatment, equal treatment seems
    like discrimination." - Thomas Sowell

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