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Showing Original Post only (View all)His friends and family members voted to support mass deportation. Now he's scrambling to stay in the country. . [View all]
Last edited Sun Dec 15, 2024, 05:17 PM - Edit history (1)
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https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/15/us/trump-immigrant-deportations-rome-georgia.html?unlocked_article_code=1.hk4.Y5-D.XRY13s7y4rts&smid=url-share
The Alienation of Jaime Cachua
His friends and family members in Rome, Ga., voted to support mass deportation. Now hes scrambling to stay in the country.
His wife was spiraling into insomnia, and his children were afraid to go to school, so Jaime Cachua sought out the person he trusted most in a crisis. He sat at his kitchen table in rural Georgia across from his father-in-law, Sky Atkins, the family patriarch. Jaime, 33, hadnt seen his own father since he was 10 months old, when he left Mexico in a car seat bound for the United States. It was Sky, 45, who had stood by Jaime at his wedding, helped him move into his first house and stayed at the hospital overnight when one of Jaimes children was sick with pneumonia.
We have to prepare for the worst-case scenario, Jaime told him. Theres a chance we could lose everything.
Isnt that a bit dramatic? Sky asked. How? Help me understand.
Jaime muted the football game on TV and began to explain his new reality as an undocumented immigrant after the election of Donald Trump, who had won the presidency in part by promising to deport more than 11 million people living in the country illegally. Trumps aides were discussing plans to build detention camps and enlist the military to carry out mass deportations beginning on Day 1. Their local Georgia congresswoman, Marjorie Taylor Greene, was saying she couldnt wait to see it happen. Jaimes best chance to become a legal U.S. resident was a new program for immigrants like himself, people who were married to U.S. citizens and had lived in the country for at least 10 years without committing any crimes. But, just a few days earlier, that program had been struck down by a Trump-appointed federal judge.
Im going to be straight with you, he told Jaime. I voted for Trump. I believe in a lot of what he says.
I figured as much, Jaime said. You and just about everyone else around here.
Its about protecting our rights as a sovereign country, Sky said. We need to shut down the infiltration on the border. Its not about you.
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But lately the trucks at his dealership were festooned with Trump flags, his church group was discussing the sanctity of borders, and his neighborhood was lined with political signs, including one that read: Start shipping off illegals NOW! More than 70 percent of voters in surrounding Floyd County had chosen Trump and his mass deportations, including many of Jaimes friends and family members.