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What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

Know Anyone Who Thinks Racial Profiling Is Exaggerated? Watch This, And Tell Me When Your Jaw Drops.


This video clearly demonstrates how racist America is as a country and how far we have to go to become a country that is civilized and actually values equal justice. We must not rest until this goal is achieved. I do not want my great grandchildren to live in a country like we have today. I wish for them to live in a country where differences of race and culture are not ignored but valued as a part of what makes America great.

Friday, May 08, 2026

All HELL BREAKS LOOSE after SUPREME COURT RULING!!!

 

Supreme court’s Voting Rights Act ruling cited misleading data from DoJ | US voting rights | The Guardian

Supreme court’s Voting Rights Act ruling cited misleading data from DoJ

A composite image shows a person holding a sign that reads 'voter suppression is un-American' on the left and a man on the right.
Demonstrators outside the US supreme court in Washington DC in October 2015. Composite: Bloomberg via Getty Images, Reuters

"The claims Samuel Alito, a supreme court justice, made about voter turnout in Louisiana in a landmark Voting Rights Act case were based on a misleading data analysis, a Guardian review has found.

In his opinion gutting section 2 of the Voting Rights Act last week, Alito said that Black voter turnout had exceeded white voter turnout in two of the five most recent presidential elections, both nationally and in Louisiana. Alito’s claim was copied almost verbatim from a friend-of-the-court brief filed by the justice department. It was a critical data point Alito used to make the argument that the kind of discrimination that once made the Voting Rights Act necessary no longer exists.

“Vast social change has occurred throughout the country and particularly in the South, where many Section 2 suits arise,” Alito wrote in a majority opinion in the case, which concerned Louisiana’s congressional map, joined by the five other conservative justices on the court. “Black voters now participate in elections at similar rates as the rest of the electorate, even turning out at higher rates than white voters in two of the five most recent Presidential elections nationwide and in Louisiana.”

But a review of turnout and racial data in Louisiana reveals that assertion relies on an unusual methodology. The justice department brief that Alito cited calculated Black and white voter turnout in Louisiana as a proportion of the total population of each racial group over the age of 18. Such an approach is not preferred by experts in calculating statewide turnout because the general over-18 population may include non-citizens, people with felony convictions and others who cannot legally vote. But it does yield Alito’s conclusion that Black voter turnout exceeded white voter turnout in the 2012 and 2016 presidential elections in Louisiana.

The widely accepted approach is to consider voter turnout as a proportion of the citizen voting age population or the voter eligible population, the latter of which excludes non-citizens as well as people who cannot vote because of a felony conviction or because they have been deemed mentally incapacitated. When the Guardian analyzed turnout numbers in Louisiana using the citizen voting age population, it found that Black voter turnout in Louisiana only exceeded white voter turnout in the 2012 presidential election.

“[The DoJ approach] is misleading because they’re including ineligible voters in the denominator,” said Michael McDonald, a political science professor at the University of Florida who is one of the nation’s leading experts on voter turnout. “If I wanted to manipulate the numbers in a way that was favorable to the government’s interest, I would be using voting age population.”

McDonald also said that the survey DoJ’s analysis was based on, the Census Bureau’s current population survey, is known to produce misleading turnout statistics.

“They had to fudge how they’re calculating the turnout rate to get there, and they’re not even taking into account margin of error, and all these other methodology issues about the current population survey to arrive at that number,” he said. “Someone knew what they were doing.”

A justice department spokesperson acknowledged that the agency used total voting age population and not the citizen voting age population to compute turnout figures. The spokesperson did not respond to a question asking why the department used that approach. A supreme court spokesperson did not return a request for comment about the methodology.

The Guardian also reviewed data from the Louisiana secretary of state’s office, which calculates voter turnout a third way, as a percentage of registered voters. Using that methodology, Black turnout has not exceeded white turnout in any of the last five presidential elections in Louisiana.

Alito’s claim about national turnout also misses the more recent picture that the turnout gap is actually widening, according to a Guardian review of election data. Barack Obama was the first Black US president on the ballot in 2008 and 2012, the two elections where Black turnout was higher than white turnout. In the three most recent presidential elections since then, Black voter turnout has lagged white voter turnout.

“In zero out of the last three presidential elections, did Black turnout come anywhere close to parity,” said Kevin Morris, a researcher at the Brennan Center for Justice, who has studied the turnout gap extensively. The overall national turnout gap has “exploded” over the last 15 years, he added. Alito’s claim is “simply not factual”, Morris wrote in a post last week.

“They’re both cherry picking a particular year, they’re cherry picking a particular method and they’re ignoring this long term more concerning trend in the data,” said Christopher Warshaw, a professor at Georgetown University who studies elections.

When the Voting Rights Act was enacted in 1965, there were ugly racial disparities in voting across the southern US. Black voter registration rates were 50 percentage points behind the voter registration rates of white people in states such as Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. Once the Voting Rights Act went into effect, that gap narrowed, in part because of federal examiners deployed to southern states to register voters. There was also a surge in Black people elected to office. In 2012, Black voter turnout reached an all time high and exceeded that of white people for the first time, at least since the passage of the Voting Rights Act.

After 2012, Black voter turnout dropped and has trailed white voter turnout in every presidential election since. That drop happened amid the supreme court’s 2013 decision in Shelby county v Holder, which gutted a requirement that places with a history of voting discrimination get election changes pre-approved by the federal government before they went into effect. The case was a major blow to the Voting Rights Act and freed up states to pass voting restrictions.

“Shelby county directly increased the racial turnout gap,” Morris said.

Kareem Crayton, a vice-president at the Brennan Center for Justice, also said it was misleading for Alito to argue the Voting Rights Act was no longer needed because disparities had decreased.

“We could have stopped the project in 1970 because things did get immediately a lot better,” he said. “It’s a bit of a ruse to say that the assessment simply is ‘if things have gotten better then the project is over.’”

Supreme court’s Voting Rights Act ruling cited misleading data from DoJ | US voting rights | The Guardian

Revealed: The Trump administration arrested the parents of at least 27,000 kids in seven months | US immigration | The Guardian

Revealed: The Trump administration arrested the parents of at least 27,000 kids in seven months

"The Guardian analyzed ICE records from January-August 2025, as advocates say the family-separation crisis will lead to generational trauma

After three months in immigration detention, 1,500 miles (2,400km) away from her 13-month-old daughter, LT was running out of options.

Her baby, who was allergic to formula and had other food sensitivities, had been vomiting constantly and needed breastmilk. But the government refused to release LT – an asylum seeker from Haiti – on bond. So, the family’s pediatrician petitioned the government to allow her to pump and mail her breastmilk from the Dilley detention center in Texas to her baby in Florida. That request was denied.

Desperate, LT asked whether her child could be brought into the detention center to be with her. The government denied that, too, she said, on the grounds that the child, who is a US citizen, couldn’t be kept at an immigration detention center.

“I’m terrified of losing my baby,” she said.

The US government has targeted thousands of parents like LT for deportation since Donald Trump took office in January 2025. A Guardian analysis of government records has found that, during the first seven months of his presidency, the administrationarrested the parents of at least 27,000 children. During this period in 2025, the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) was deporting about twice as many parents each month compared with 2024.

The records do not detail how many of these children were detained or deported with their parents, and how many families were split up. But the data provides one of the starkest views yet of how Trump’s mass deportation scheme has affected parents and children. In thousands of cases, DHS sought to deport parents who had a different citizenship or nationality than their children, creating major legal and logistical barriers to keeping families together.

The Guardian’s analysis also revealed:

  • During the first seven months of 2025, the administration arrested 18,400 parents – including 15,000 fathers and 3,000 mothers. They are the parents of 27,000 to 32,000 children.

  • The administration arrested the parents of at least 12,000 US citizen children.

  • Nearly 7,500 fathers and 1,000 mothers who were arrested had a different nationality than at least one of their children. In about half of these families, siblings had different citizenships from each other.

  • On average, the Trump administration has been arresting about 2,300 parents each month and deporting 1,400 parents every month. The Biden administration, in comparison, deported about 700 per month in 2024.

Taken together, these figures capture the vast scope of a new family separation crisis created by the US government, human rights advocates said, a crisis that has far surpassed in scale the “zero tolerance” policy of the first Trump administration, when the US systematically separated immigrant children from their parents at the US-Mexico border.

The data underlying these findings comes from I-213 forms, which immigration agents fill out each time they make an arrest alleging a person is in the US without authorization. The forms document people’s ages, nationalities, criminal histories – and, crucially, the number and nationalities of their minor children.

A spokesperson for the DHS said the agency “cannot verify the veracity of this data” – even though the Guardian acquired the data via a freedom of information lawsuit. The Guardian cross-checked the records against other government sources.

The government data, said immigration lawyers and researchers, is likely an underestimate of the number of family separations – because in many cases, immigration officials don’t ask the people they arrest whether they have children, and in other cases parents don’t disclose that they have children in order to protect their families from being detained or deported.

The separations will have generational, transnational reverberations, said Faisal Al-Juburi, of the legal aid non-profit Raíces. “We have now reached the metastasis of family separation under this administration,” he said. “I don’t think we’ve even begun as a nation to grapple with the impact of this type of immigration enforcement and the domino effect it will have.”

LT, 30, fled political violence in Haiti, where, she said, supporters of an opposing political party burned down her house, kidnapped her and raped her. She escaped first to the Bahamas and then arrived by boat in Miami, Florida, in 2019. She fears she would die if she returned now; she said her sister was murdered last year. And her daughter, she worries, wouldn’t be able to get the medical care she needs in Haiti – so she wouldn’t risk bringing her baby there even if she could.

She has also grown increasingly worried that her baby will end up in foster care. LT’s mother is watching the child, but it is impossible for her to work full time and care for an infant – especially not one with complicated medical needs. And, LT has filed a domestic violence complaint against the baby’s father, whom she said has threatened to kill both her and the infant.

“I wish I could be there for my daughter,” LT said in a written statement her lawyers shared with the Guardian. “She is my first child, and I cannot be there for her.”


The Guardian has reviewed more than a dozen cases, and interviewed multiple parents and children who had been separated by detention or deportation. In each case, a sudden arrest or deportation of a parent had radically disrupted the trajectory of a child’s life.

With faces obscured, what appears to be a younger women or girl, with a white headband in her hair, hugs an older woman with graying hair.
A girl whose father was detained during federal immigration-enforcement operations, during a vigil at the Guatemalan-Maya Center in Lake Worth, Florida, on 11 December 2025. Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

When KO, a 41-year-old Guatemalan mother of three was arrested at an ICE check-in appointment, she told an officer she had a 19-month-old who would be expecting her back home. “The officer said my child and I could die for all he cared,” she said.

While Herminia was held away from her nine-year-old and 16-year-old for eight months, the children’s mental health started to deteriorate, she said. Her young daughter had trouble sleeping through the night, and her teen son considered dropping out of school in order to work and support his sister.

After Marco, 61, was arrested at a Home Depot in Maryland and deported to El Salvador, his 17-year-old, Mark – a US citizen – spent his last months of high school working so that he and his mother could make enough money for rent.

Families described scrambling for funds after a primary breadwinner was detained or deported. Teens and young adults had to drop out of school to take care of younger siblings after both parents were deported. Children were left wondering when or whether they would ever be able to see parents who had been deported back to countries where they faced death threats.

“They are uprooting lives,” said Al-Juburi.

To meet Trump ’s demand for “mass deportations”, the administration has been arresting a record number of immigrants, including people who have been living in the country for many years and have built lives and families in the US. The vast majority of people detained have either no criminal histories, or minor convictions such as traffic offenses.

The push for mass deportation has had a pernicious impact on families, and on mothers in particular. Using the same records as those obtained by the Guardian, ProPublicafound that the Trump administration was deporting four times as many mothers of US citizens each day compared with the Biden administration.

Meanwhile, the administration has also weakened protections for non-citizen parents, and stepped back commitments to keep parents united. In several cases, immigration officials had also threatened to separate families, seemingly in order to coerce parents into voluntarily leaving the US.

Lauren Bis, a spokesperson for the DHS, declined to answer a series of questions from the Guardian, including questions about government policies on family separation. The agency denied separating families, and said that “parents are asked if they want to be removed with their children”. Bis also said “being in detention is a choice”, encouraging immigrant parents to use a government app to “self-deport”.

Many parents who have fled dangerous conditions in their home countries feel they cannot risk bringing their children with them. And if they are deported from the US without their children, their separation could be indefinite.

That is the case for EFA, an asylum seeker from Venezuela who was arrested – unexpectedly – at a routine ICE check-in appointment in October. Her husband struggled both to care for their two-year-old son and to make enough money to support him. Before her arrest, EFA had worked night shifts and her husband had worked days so that one of them was always home with their child.

The family’s church congregation jumped into action, organizing a childcare rotation while her husband worked. But the situation is tenuous. EFA’s husband is also an asylum-seeker, and the family is fearful that he, too, will be detained, leaving their son without a guardian.“I cannot help but feel an immense amount of sadness and helplessness due to this separation,” EFA said in a written statement her lawyers at Raíces provided to the Guardian.

A child of about 7 or 8 years old with his arm’s around his father’s waist, and his father’s arms holding his.
A child cries as he holds his father, a man from Venezuela, after they were detained and released after leaving immigration court in New York City on 5 March. Photograph: Michael M Santiago/Getty Images

If she were deported to Venezuela, things could get even more complicated. Both she and her husband still face the threat of violence due to their political activism, she said, and are reluctant to take their son back there. But if she leaves the US without her child, it could become exponentially more difficult for the family to reunite. If she is deported, she would be barred from trying to re-enter the US for a decade. And even if EFA and her husband decided to bring their son to Venezuela, they would likely encounter logistical and legal barriers. There are no Venezuelan consulates in the US, and EFA’s husband wouldn’t be able to get a new passport to travel. Many Venezuelans in the US have been struggling to acquire travel documents to return home, even as the US government continues to encourage immigrants to “self-deport” to their home countries.

Her health and sanity, she said, are unravelling at the Dilley detention center where she’s being held. She cries herself to sleep every night, she said, but “I have not sought psychological help because I do not believe anyone can ease the sorrow in my heart. I just need to be with my son.”


Seven years ago, Trump’s “zero tolerance” separation policy sparked national outrage after the media began sharing images of agents wresting crying children from their parents’ arms and placing them in cages. Trump officially ended the policy after about six weeks, but more than 5,500 children had been separated from their parents by then. Hundreds of parents remain separated from their children years later, because the administration lost track of many of the families it forced apart.

Kelly Kribs, an attorney at the Young Center, said the separation crisis unfolding now is even more insidious.

“It’s leading to all the same forms of trauma that we saw unfold back in 2018,” said Kribs, who worked for years to reunite families separated by the zero-tolerance policy. “But the speed and the scale of the separations now is at a level we’ve never seen before.”

In recent months, she has been working with parents who have been both detained or deported away from their children in the US. A report earlier this year also found that the government was deporting a significant number of parents without first asking whether they had children, or allowing them an opportunity to arrange for the care of their children, in apparent violation of its own policies.

Once families are separated across international borders, it can be extraordinarily difficult to reunite them, Kribs said.

a woman and a young boy
Many families live in constant fear that US immigration authorities will separate them. Photograph: Octavio Jones/AFP/Getty Images

For Oscar, 32, a Honduran environmental activist who was deported back to the country from which he had fled death threats, it could take months or years before he is able to rejoin his wife, Ana, and his seven- and nine-year-old children in Maryland.

The family had applied for asylum together, but then Oscar was arrested at a check-in appointment, moved to a Texas detention facility and deported. Ana and the children, in the meantime, were granted asylum. So Oscar’s lawyer filed a petition to allow him to rejoin his family in the US. But the International Refugee Assistance Project, an advocacy group, found “dramatic delays” in the processing of these petitions.

Oscar, meanwhile, plans to remain in hiding in Honduras – staying alone in an apartment and avoiding going outside – for as long as he can. When he calls the children, he tells them: “Dad is going to come back soon.” He tells them to behave well for their mother, to remember that he didn’t leave them by choice and to consider that, maybe, this is all part of God’s plan. “We are going to get through this, that I know,” he tells them. “I believe in God’s will and I know that I can return to you.”

Things can get doubly complicated when parents and children don’t share the same citizenship. Recently, Kribs said, she was trying to help a Venezuelan man who was deported by the US to Mexico – one of many immigrants that the government has sent to “third countries” that are willing to accept deportees. His son, who was born in Colombia, remained in the US. So at first, Kribs tried to get the US to deport the child to Mexico – but Mexico declined to receive him. Instead, the father had to figure out a way to travel to Colombia, where he was finally able to reunite with his son after two months of separation.

Among the many considerations Kribs had in that case and others was the question of how to help a young child cross international borders alone. Often, the relatives who step in as guardians after children’s parents are deported are also undocumented, and unable to travel with a child. Getting someone who isn’t a relative to accompany them can be challenging to arrange, and it requires notarized paperwork so there’s no risk the adult will be stopped under suspicion of child trafficking.

Complex, and ever-evolving international politics can also affect how easy – or difficult – it is for a child to get the correct travel documents. Airline policies vary on when and how children can fly unaccompanied. Even if the airline allows for it, Kribs said, it can be a scary journey for a young child. “How can a six-year-old be expected to navigate customs and immigration on his own?” she said.

Hundreds of families are facing similarly mundane yet mountainous barriers to reunification, Kribs said. Hundreds of parents do not know when they will be able to hold their children again.

“I think that’s part of what makes this problem harder for the public to wrap their brains around, is now the family separation is all around us every day across the country, which makes it hard to call out as a unique crisis,” she said. “It has become our everyday reality.”

  • The Guardian has used initials or first names only in some cases, to protect the identities of individuals who fear retaliation within the US immigration system, or who face threats in their home countries"

Revealed: The Trump administration arrested the parents of at least 27,000 kids in seven months | US immigration | The Guardian

Thursday, May 07, 2026

Maddow: Trump is terrible at everything except this one thing

 

The REAL Story Behind Spirit Airlines and Why It Wasn't Saved

 

GOP Rushes to Erase Black Representation Across the South After SCOTUS Guts Voting Rights

 

Professors sue Atlanta’s Emory University over handling of Israel-Gaza protests

 

Professors sue Atlanta’s Emory University over handling of Israel-Gaza protests

“Students and faculty have also protested against surveillance cameras on campus and handling of racist posts by a studen

 
(As a graduate of Emory University Law School I find the university’s behavior to be part of a tradition of repression of progressive ideas. I was told but an Assitant Dean that I was blacklisted from being recommended to law firms recruiting at Emory because I openly refused to participate in a mock trial competition where I had been assigned to argue against affirmative action when the professor who was overseeing the competition was consulting with President Reagan’s Justice Department which was working to eliminate affirmative action. I discussed it with the School’s Dean Epstein, a very clueless man who had us graduate in a downpour because of his negligence in mot moving the ceremony to our designated indoor rain location. I told the Jewish Dean that it was like asking Jewish students to defend Nazi War Criminals he countered it was more like asking Catholics to defend abortion rights. He ignorantly thought, without a factual basis that most Catholics were against abortion rights. I had moved from NYC two years earlier. I knew better. This was and is Emory excepting a few open minded professors like Tim Terrell.) John H Armwood II



A person's hands are bound behind their back with white plastic zip ties.
Protesters cuffed after being detained on campus of Emory University during a pro-Palestinian demonstration on 25 April 2024, in Atlanta. Photograph: Mike Stewart/AP

Atlanta’s Emory University is facing a lawsuit from three tenured professors over its handling of 2024 protests against Israel’s assault on Gaza, capping off a tumultuous end to the spring semester.

In recent months faculty and students have also demanded the removal of Flock surveillance cameras on campus, and Black law school students and others protested the school’s response to a student’s social media posts and emails that were filled with the N-word.

Emory is one of the richest private schools in the US, with the nation’s 12th-largest endowment. It is also the Atlanta metro area’s second-largest employer.

Noëlle McAfee, chair of the philosophy department and one of three plaintiffs in the civil complaint, sees the recent events at the school as connected. They reflect what is happening “mostly at public universities, but is creeping into private ones … a very dark, authoritarian turn happening around the country”, McAfee said.

The lawsuit alleges the three professors sustained wrongful arrests and prosecution after the school’s administration called Atlanta police and state troopers onto campus two years ago, brutally shutting down a protest encampment less than an hour after it began. The suit also alleges the school violated its own open expression policy.

The Guardian’s reporting on a conservative group that later targeted those who were arrested that day is named in the lawsuit.

McAfee hopes to draw attention to the school’s behavior with the complaint and help ensure the school never calls police onto the campus to quash a protest again. She says some faculty and students have never recovered from the incident. “The trauma of that day, the violence of it, are so massive and so disruptive – and the administration has taken no ownership for what they did, and provided no apology.”

Meanwhile, Emory law school expelled a student named Milano Wayne on 23 April, after months of social media posts and emails to a faculty member containing racist, misogynistic and transphobic messages – including, in an email, his intention to “stomp on n****s”.

This decision followed seven months of escalating concerns, according to Kylie Doyle, past president of the Student Bar Association. Doyle compared the school’s swift response to the April 2024 protest seeking the school’s divestment from Israel with its months long reaction to Wayne’s communications, which earlier this year had students fearing he would commit violence against members of the groups he targeted.

“When the university had students and faculty protests on campus, they were immediately arrested and shot with rubber bullets and tear gas,” Doyle said. “But when a student talks about Black people this way, it takes months for the school to respond.”

As a member of Emory’s Black Law Students Association, Greear Webb was one of about 10 students who met on 13 April with law school dean Richard Freer and other members of the school’s administration.

In the meeting, Freer expressed concerns “about the current political climate, and that the university didn’t want to do anything to put Emory on the administration’s college hit list”, Webb told the Guardian.

Webb noted that Milano was allowed to stay enrolled and take classes remotely for months while the school investigated his behavior. “It seemed like they were giving privileges to someone with racist, violent ideologies,” he said.

After the 13 April meeting, he said, the students felt “disappointed and frustrated”.

They would like to see the student code of conduct be revised to name hate speech and related threats. Also, echoing McAfee, he said, “We’re asking for an apology, a specific acknowledgment that [Milano’s] behavior impacted Black, women and LGBTQ+ students.”

As for Atlanta-based surveillance tech company Flock Safety, a group of students says it has gathered more than a thousand student and faculty signatures opposing the company’s license plate reader cameras on campus. They cite concerns such as a lack of transparent communication from the school about their use and ways in which information from the cameras can wind up in the hands of federal agencies such as ICE.

Under the name DeFlock Emory Coalition, the group published an editorial on 29 April in the Emory Wheel, a student newspaper, calling on the school to “prepare for a mass mobilization should Emory ignore our demands”.

“We demand that our university be the institution it claims to be: one that defends inquiry, dissent and the people who make this community possible,” the editorial concludes.

Laura Diamond, spokesperson for Emory, declined to answer questions from the Guardian about faculty and students seeking apologies and the school’s concerns about being targeted by the Trump administration – and instead sent previously-released statements.

One statement said the lawsuit is “without merit” and that “Emory acts appropriately and responsibly to keep our community safe from threats of harm”. Another said “[t]here is no place in our university for harassment, threats, and bullying. We condemn the vile and hateful language used by the individual in the emails and social media posts.” A third said the school is “taking additional steps to further review how data is shared” from Flock cameras.

Emil’ Keme, an Indigenous K’iche’ Maya scholar, is also a plaintiff on the complaint over the 2024 protest. As with the DeFlock students, he noted the school’s behavior differs from its promoted image.

The swift clampdown on protest and brutal arrests, he said, “went against the principles the school defends: search for knowledge, dialogue and so on”. Since then, he said, “students are afraid” to protest. “This ties into what’s happening nationally,” he said. “It’s a bleak climate.”

McAfee said students now “have to weigh whether it’s safe to demonstrate about something they believe in. There’s a loss of trust.” One student told her: “I don’t want to go to jail – I want to go to med school,” in a conversation about the subject.

Stefano Harvey, a professor at the Academy of Media Arts in Cologne, Germany, who has studied higher education in the US, said that universities under the Trump administration have been emboldened “to act more like corporations”.

“It’s capitalism trying to get universities in order … [they’re] selling study, learning and community – advertisements that suck you in,” he said. “But then, in each of these cases [at Emory], unfortunately people have to be disabused of these ideas. It’s a very sobering moment.”