Italia Fittante is a high school literature teacher in Minneapolis. This essay was published by Education Week. Trump promised during his campaign to deport “the worst of the worst,” criminals, rapists, murderers. Instead he has put a target on the back of every immigrant, no matter how long they have lived here, no matter how much they have contributed to society. Our children are experiencing a reign of terror.
One of my seniors walked into my classroom after school yesterday. He needed an extension on his final project, and I could see he’d been working up the nerve to ask me.
His parents haven’t left the house in over a week for fear of being stopped by immigration agents, which means someone has to work. At 17, that someone is him. After school every weekday and all day on weekends, every week, because the bills don’t stop.
He carries his U.S. passport everywhere now, tucked in his pocket, transferred from his jeans to his school uniform and back again, refusing to let it out of his sight even in my classroom. He’s been stopped twice on his walk home from work by masked men and women in unmarked cars, demanding he prove his right to exist in the country where he was born.
He wants to go to medical school; he’s always dreamt of being a doctor. He told me about the university in Mexico holding a spot for him, the contingency plan he never thought he’d need. Just in case things get worse here and he has to follow his parents across the border, just in case his future is decided by policy instead of potential.
I told him to forget the deadline.
Another one of my seniors came to me early Tuesday morning before class started, her eyes hollowed out and bloodshot from lack of sleep. She was concerned about making up a reading quiz she had missed the day before.
In tears, she explained to me that she was working the register at a fast-food restaurant over the weekend when ICE agents burst through the doors midshift. They pushed past her, forced their way into the back of the restaurant, and violently detained two of her co-workers. Nobody knows where they went, when they’re coming back, or if they’re coming back at all.
She told me she hadn’t slept since the raid. This student, who immigrated with her family to the United States just three years ago, described being paralyzed with fear.
I told her to forget the quiz.
The past few weeks in Minnesota have been marked by relentless federal immigration operations. Agents operate openly and without restraint. This week alone, ICE detained multiple students from a neighboring district, one as young as 5 years old. Children and teenagers have been taken on their way to school, from driveways and from cars. My students live with the constant awareness that anyone they love could be taken at any moment. They themselves could be next.
What we’re asking these kids to do seems impossible. Show up. Focus. Read about the American Dream in Advanced Placement Literature while you wonder if your father will be deported before graduation. Solve for x while you’re solving how to pay the electric bill. Write your college application essay about overcoming adversity while doubting you’ll survive it.
They already come to school knowing they might die there. We’ve made peace with that somehow. Lockdown drills and barricading doors are routine. My students can tell you the difference between shots fired in the building versus shots fired nearby. At the beginning of the school year, two elementary students were killed during mass at a Catholic school just miles from us. Before the media even covered it, my students were calling their parents. I could hear them crying in the halls, in my classroom.
Some of them knew the victims. Now, they come to school and know which corner of each room has the best cover. They are 17 years old and fluent in survival tactics.
My students carry U.S. passports in their pockets like keys to a house where the locks keep changing, navigating their own city like it’s hostile territory. Their walks to and from school are haunted by the persistent possibility that they’ll come home to silence, their parents taken by masked strangers who leave no forwarding address.
We’re creating a generation of students from immigrant families who understand exactly how little this country values their safety.
They’re learning the lesson we’re teaching, even if it’s not the one we claim to be giving. They understand the message we’re sending when we demand their labor and their silence and their gratitude, all while treating their existence as conditional and their families as disposable. How can we expect them to love their country when those in power have made it clear their country doesn’t love them back?
The curriculum is clear. Documentation determines dignity, and borders determine which families matter. Authority needs no accountability, not when violence can be rebranded as policy if it advances “our” goals.
My students understand what’s happening because they’re living it. The stakes are clearer to them than to most adults I know. They don’t need explanations or sympathy or platitudes or extensions. They need safety without surveillance, because this country is theirs, too. No child should have to carry identification to prove their right to exist.
What sort of nation terrorizes children and calls it enforcement? That demands loyalty while offering nothing but fear? My students already know the answer. They learned it the moment they started carrying passports in their pockets.

Palestinian children have been enduring far worse from their occupiers for over two years now. Funny how we only care when things like this blow back home.
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“My students understand what’s happening because they’re living it. The stakes are clearer to them than to most adults I know.”
Perhaps they do know, but I wonder if the poor people now marginalized because of their skin color really understand how this relates to geopolitical trends. The world over, big money is using fear mongering to solidify national power. Perhaps international power.
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I believe they understand that far better than most white Americans. That’s what the west has always done. I could give you plenty of suggested reading on the topic.
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What sort of nation terrorizes its children?
One ruled by the likes of Trump and Miller and the toadying, spineless sycophants in the House and Senate and Extreme, uh Supreme, Court who serve these ghouls.
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The Supreme Crap is the most worrisome of this affair. They seem bent on creating the imperial presidency.
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(Sarcasm alert.) Let’s be worried about the schools’ standardized test scores. More public schools are failing…close them down!
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Thought you’d be interested in a followup on what is happening to the teacher who was fired because she posted a sign in her classroom, “Everyone is Welcome Here.” I had let the Idaho Statesman newspaper know that I supported Sarah Inama. I’m a graduate of public schools in Boise.
Idaho teacher sues over classroom sign removal, challenges state law
BOISE, Idaho (CBS2) — A former West Ada School District teacher, Sarah Inama, has filed a federal lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of an Idaho law that led to the removal of her classroom sign reading “Everyone is Welcome Here.”
According to Idaho Ed News. Inama, now employed by the Boise School District, is seeking a declaration from the U.S. District Court for the District of Idaho that the law, which prohibits the display of certain flags and banners, violates both the U.S. Constitution and the Idaho Constitution. The lawsuit names several defendants, including the Idaho State Board of Education, Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador, and West Ada School District officials.
In January 2025, Inama was instructed to remove two signs promoting inclusivity from her classroom at Lewis and Clark Middle School in Meridian. The signs were deemed out of alignment with district policy against “controversial issues” and “advancement of individual beliefs.”
Idaho Ed News says that House Bill 41, signed into law by Gov. Brad Little around this same time, the bill prohibits K-12 public schools from displaying flags or banners expressing opinions or beliefs on politics, economics, society, faith, or religion…
https://idahonews.com/newsletter-daily/idaho-teacher-sues-over-classroom-sign-removal-challenges-state-law
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This is truly a manufactured controversy.
Why should anyone consider it political to say “Everyone is welcome here”?
That four-word statement is no different from a sign saying “Welcome.”
Would it be acceptable to hang a sign listing those who are NOT welcome?
What a nonsensical law!
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