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The Politics Bar After Hours - Fugly On The Inside
National concern over immigration enforcement is growing, including in Georgia, as advocacy groups point to videos circulating online that show how U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests are being carried out.
In Georgia, organizers say what they’re seeing does not align with federal claims that enforcement efforts are focused primarily on violent crime.
Kris Mecholsky, cofounder of Savannah Indivisible, said the footage tells a different story.
“We’re not seeing videos of people being taken in from gangs. We’re seeing videos of people being taken from courtrooms, from churches, from their houses, from work, from school.”
Advocates say aggressive immigration enforcement is creating fear and isolation across the state, particularly in rural communities where ICE activity is often less visible and occurs away from public scrutiny.
Mecholsky said that fear has been keeping families silent for years — even before the fatal shooting of Renee Good by ICE agents in Minneapolis brought renewed national attention to enforcement practices.
“I think there’s a whole lot more suffering going on in every community than most Americans are aware of. Our group has been trying to help the affected families in our area… because these families are terrified.”
She added that while immigration policy is set at the federal level, local governments in Georgia still have authority when it comes to how ICE operates within their communities.
Some towns, Mecholsky said, are already pushing back against expanded detention infrastructure and cooperation with federal enforcement.
“In Georgia, there’s a town that is trying to prevent the building of a new detention center in its area. The federal government can’t just force cities and counties to arrest people and build detention centers. We have mechanisms to fight those.”
Advocates say increased transparency, local oversight and community-based support are critical as immigration enforcement continues to expand beyond major cities and into smaller, rural areas of the state.
Written by: georgianow
advocacy Georgia Politics ICE immigrant communities immigration public safety rural Georgia
National morning drive radio and television star Stephanie Miller hosts The Stephanie Miller Show, reaching over six million listeners weekly on satellite and terrestrial radio, simulcast on FreeSpeech TV. A ratings powerhouse who dominated at KABC, KFI, and stations in New York and Chicago, she's been ranked on Talkers Magazine's "Heavy Hundred" for over a decade and won their Woman of the Year Award. Her sold-out Sexy Liberal Comedy Tour became the fastest-selling comedy tour in history, earning three Pollstar nominations and producing America's #1 comedy album. Praised by Rachel Maddow as "the high priestess of excellent liberal talk" and by Carol Burnett as "the Carol Burnett of radio," this Liberal icon—ironically the daughter of Barry Goldwater's 1964 VP running mate—is known as "The Voice of The Resistance."
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