Sunday, February 22, 2026

One for All

It’s not that I hate surprises, it’s just that I tend to feel better when they aren’t … you know … around.

Surprises that so “lurk” are usually not in the form of a few dollars you may have left in a pocket before the wash, or the delight of an adult-presenting child who comes back from college on a random weekend just to bask in the refrigerator light of “home.”

Surprises shouldn’t be skulking about in the form of some new horror interrupting our lives randomly as Breaking News.

They shouldn’t be accompanied by a video of a shirtless Secretary of Health and Human Services swimming around a plunge pool, wearing jeans, while his workout buddy - a scraggly-haired rocker who performed a segregated half-time show in dishonor of the Super Bowl, gives the camera his middle finger.  

Nor should there be actual footage of the person who leads the agency tasked with protecting the health and safety of the nation, bragging to a podcaster about having no fear of infectious disease because he “used to snort cocaine off toilet seats.”

But here we are.

Turning on our televisions, watching as paramilitary forces hide their faces as they cause chaos across the country: swarming people as they try to do their jobs, or fulfill the requirements of their requests for remaining in this land. We’ve seen anonymous forces use chemical weapons at point-blank range on people who were brutalized, pulled out of cars, tackled and shackled, sometimes in front of their children.

We are enraged that these federal forces, often multiplied by our local police, don’t even take care to know when they are trampling on the rights of citizens.

Human rights and due process should be for all who inhabit this land. We might forget that the Constitution does not differentiate between how people are treated under the law, whether they were born here or just visiting. Without it, no one will ever be safe, let alone free.

At what point will we allow ourselves to imagine what could be possible if we reprioritize our needs? If we consider the alternative, what truly makes us safe does not include rounding up our neighbors and locking them away in a concentration camp.


The New York For All Act, legislation aimed at protecting immigrant communities by prohibiting state and local resources, including law enforcement and government agencies, from assisting in federal civil immigration enforcement, would be a start in the right direction toward allowing our neighbors to live as the Constitution demands, as well as ensuring our police are truly protecting and serving the community.


Bryan MacCormack, Co-Executive Director, Columbia County Sanctuary Movement, explains, “There is a long and growing list of documented collusion between New York State and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, including a coordinated and grant-funded seat-belt checkpoint with the DMV, State Troopers, Albany County Sheriff’s, and Cohoes police department. Words of indignation will not prevent New York from aiding in the separation of families, deportation of our neighbors, and terrorization of our communities. Only New York for All can do that.”

The act would not only ban the formal agreements – known as 239 (g) agreements – that enable local law enforcement from assisting federal immigration agents permanently, but it would also prohibit all state and local agencies from sharing information pertaining to civil immigration law; as well as ban information-sharing and custody transfers that funnel New Yorkers into ICE detention; and require a judicial warrant before ICE can access government information or property; and finally, create consistency so protections are uniform statewide.


“When parents are taken at traffic stops, or workers are detained because local agencies share information with ICE, it is not just a policy failure — it is a moral failure,” said Rashida Tyler, Acting Executive Director, New York State Council of Churches. “Our houses of worship see the fear in our communities. Children are afraid to go to school. Survivors hesitate to call for help. Trust in public institutions erodes. New York must not participate in a system that tears families apart. The New York for All Act offers permanent, statewide protections rooted in the simple truth that our government should serve and safeguard all New Yorkers, not act as an arm of mass deportation.”

Justice is the underpinning of democratic freedom. We need to fix what’s broken to ensure those freedoms don’t slip away.


We shouldn’t endure any more unwanted surprises. We can’t allow it continue and remain surprised at where it leads us.


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