
you ran into this thread with the above.
You were also told ADOS/FBA can't be deported because it goes AGAINST the constitution and your response was "well there have been violations of the constitution"
I'm going to ask you one last time.
1. HOW are 40 million FBA going to be rounded up?
2. WHERE will 40 million FBA be deported to?
3. You think ADOS/FBA would just allow this to happen?
All you're capable of is strawman arguments. I never claimed Black people WILL be deported. I asked what is there stop them from being deported. If your answer is the constitution, well look at my previous examples of how that isn't the case and below are examples of black Americans being detained without due process. In other words, the two things happening to undocumented people. The same constitution was supposed to protect the people below as it does undocumented people in America.
1. The Scottsboro Boys (1931)
Nine Black teenagers were arrested in Alabama and accused of raping two white women. They were denied adequate legal representation, faced all-white juries, and underwent rushed trials that reeked of racism. Some were sentenced to death. It took decades of legal wrangling to get even partial justice—some never got it.
2. COINTELPRO & Political Prisoners
The FBI’s Counterintelligence Program (COINTELPRO) targeted Black activists—think Black Panthers, SNCC leaders—through harassment, false imprisonment, and legal manipulation. People like Mumia Abu-Jamal and Assata Shakur were imprisoned under highly questionable circumstances, often with evidence suggesting gross violations of due process.
3. Kalief Browder (2010-2013)
A 16-year-old from the Bronx, arrested for allegedly stealing a backpack. He spent three years at Rikers Island—two of them in solitary confinement—without ever being tried or convicted. Charges were eventually dropped, but he was so scarred by the experience that he later died by suicide. A tragic testament to how the system can grind down the innocent.
4. The “War on Drugs” Era
Thousands of Black Americans were swept up by mass arrests and racially biased policing—often under mandatory minimum sentencing laws—denied proper legal counsel, and sometimes coerced into plea deals that stripped them of their rights. Due process was a paper tiger; systemic racism had the upper hand.
5. Post-9/11 Detentions
Black Muslims, along with other Muslim Americans, were sometimes detained without charges under the material witness statute, which was abused to hold people indefinitely without due process. Though not exclusively Black, a significant portion of those targeted were Black Muslims, highlighting a double burden of racial and religious profiling.
On one hand you accept that we live in a racist country that hates us...but you think that very same system built to repress us will protect us. That's asinine. I won't answer dystopian questions because that wasn't my thesis. I asked about what mechanisms exist to prevent that and your flimsy, naive answer of "the constitution" is insufficient. The same constitution was amended to create a prison industrial complex that is a derivative of slavery vis a vis the 13th amendment. If that's what you put the faith of black people's safety in, you're in for even more rude awakenings. I suggest you learn some history and become comfortable with slippery slopes and precedents.