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Sheriff Joe Arpaio and President Donald Trump balloons in Phoenix this week. (Photo credit: LUCHA / Twitter)
Here in Phoenix, we've got a pretty good idea of what lies ahead for America under Donald Trump. It will look less and less like a nation of laws, and more like Sheriff Joe Arpaio's lawless Arizona, unless we do something about it now.
Here in Phoenix, we've got a pretty good idea of what lies ahead for America under Donald Trump. It will look less and less like a nation of laws, and more like Sheriff Joe Arpaio's lawless Arizona, unless we do something about it now.
Arpaio was Maricopa County's corrupt sheriff for twenty-four years. During his reign, immigrants and their families were hounded and humiliated. He arrested Latinos because of their names and the color of their skin. He organized an illegal posse to raid workplaces, supermarkets and churches, ripping mothers and fathers away from their families, purely on suspicion they were out of status.
"Arpaio's abuses set the groundwork for Trump's national agenda. We now see the results. In just six months, the Trump presidency has brought white supremacy out of the shadows, emboldened racists, and families torn apart."
Arpaio misappropriated funds, refused to investigate real crimes like rape, and forced detainees to wear pink underwear in an open-air desert compound.
He bragged about spending more to feed his dogs than he did on food for detainees.
Last month, a Federal Court convicted Arpaio of criminal contempt. Finally, we felt, Sheriff Joe was being held to account for violating the rule of law he had so long claimed to uphold.
But for Arizonans, our real victory came six months earlier, when we voted Sheriff Joe out of office. One of his successor's first acts was to close Tent City, the notorious open-air prison Arpaio once proudly called a "concentration camp."
For us at Living United for Change in Arizona (LUCHA), these victories were the culmination of a decade of organizing, alongside grassroots allies and affected community members. I started organizing against Sheriff Joe in 2007 as a volunteer, when I began to see the effects Arpaio's fear tactics were having on immigrant families like my own.
Since 2010, LUCHA's efforts have been focused on voter registration and building political power in the community, to make sure our voices are heard.
When the community Arpaio had terrorized for so long took to the streets and moved Arizona voters to take him out at the ballot box, we were saying, "we've had enough of this bully and his violence in our community, and we won't take it anymore."
Then Donald Trump came to town, and all but promised to pardon Sheriff Joe. "I think he's gonna be just fine," Trump told his rally at the Phoenix Convention Center. "But, but, I won't do it tonight because I don't want to cause any controversy. Is that ok? But Sheriff Joe can feel good."
I was one of the thousands who gathered outside the Convention Center during Trump's speech to peacefully protest his message of hatred and division.
When we heard there might be a pardon for Arpaio, we were outraged. But to tell the truth, we weren't shocked. Because we already knew not to put anything past this president.
The thousands who gathered peacefully in Phoenix were sending a clear and simple message to Trump: "We want you to follow the rule of law."
Let's sit with that for a second.
The community, our community, was telling a sitting president - the President of the United States, our president - to follow the rule of law, when he has demonstrated time and time again that he does not care what voters say, that he does not care what the judicial system says.
Arpaio's abuses set the groundwork for Trump's national agenda. We now see the results. In just six months, the Trump presidency has brought white supremacy out of the shadows, emboldened racists, and families torn apart.
Sadly, Arpaio's culture of hate and racism is still embedded in our county. Despite our victories, the collaboration between Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and our county jails is very vivid. Vulnerable members of our community continue to be criminalized and separated from their families.
We know the damage racism and xenophobia can inflict, because we have lived it ourselves. We do not need a repeat of the harsh years under Arpaio, when our community could not step foot outside, when our families' homes were raided, when we saw their faces pressed up against glass windows on a bus that would rip them away from their family.
Don't let Arpaio's Arizona become Trump's America.
Trump is carrying out an agenda that's supremacist, racist, and filled with hate. Our community, together with many others, is not going to stand for it.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Here in Phoenix, we've got a pretty good idea of what lies ahead for America under Donald Trump. It will look less and less like a nation of laws, and more like Sheriff Joe Arpaio's lawless Arizona, unless we do something about it now.
Arpaio was Maricopa County's corrupt sheriff for twenty-four years. During his reign, immigrants and their families were hounded and humiliated. He arrested Latinos because of their names and the color of their skin. He organized an illegal posse to raid workplaces, supermarkets and churches, ripping mothers and fathers away from their families, purely on suspicion they were out of status.
"Arpaio's abuses set the groundwork for Trump's national agenda. We now see the results. In just six months, the Trump presidency has brought white supremacy out of the shadows, emboldened racists, and families torn apart."
Arpaio misappropriated funds, refused to investigate real crimes like rape, and forced detainees to wear pink underwear in an open-air desert compound.
He bragged about spending more to feed his dogs than he did on food for detainees.
Last month, a Federal Court convicted Arpaio of criminal contempt. Finally, we felt, Sheriff Joe was being held to account for violating the rule of law he had so long claimed to uphold.
But for Arizonans, our real victory came six months earlier, when we voted Sheriff Joe out of office. One of his successor's first acts was to close Tent City, the notorious open-air prison Arpaio once proudly called a "concentration camp."
For us at Living United for Change in Arizona (LUCHA), these victories were the culmination of a decade of organizing, alongside grassroots allies and affected community members. I started organizing against Sheriff Joe in 2007 as a volunteer, when I began to see the effects Arpaio's fear tactics were having on immigrant families like my own.
Since 2010, LUCHA's efforts have been focused on voter registration and building political power in the community, to make sure our voices are heard.
When the community Arpaio had terrorized for so long took to the streets and moved Arizona voters to take him out at the ballot box, we were saying, "we've had enough of this bully and his violence in our community, and we won't take it anymore."
Then Donald Trump came to town, and all but promised to pardon Sheriff Joe. "I think he's gonna be just fine," Trump told his rally at the Phoenix Convention Center. "But, but, I won't do it tonight because I don't want to cause any controversy. Is that ok? But Sheriff Joe can feel good."
I was one of the thousands who gathered outside the Convention Center during Trump's speech to peacefully protest his message of hatred and division.
When we heard there might be a pardon for Arpaio, we were outraged. But to tell the truth, we weren't shocked. Because we already knew not to put anything past this president.
The thousands who gathered peacefully in Phoenix were sending a clear and simple message to Trump: "We want you to follow the rule of law."
Let's sit with that for a second.
The community, our community, was telling a sitting president - the President of the United States, our president - to follow the rule of law, when he has demonstrated time and time again that he does not care what voters say, that he does not care what the judicial system says.
Arpaio's abuses set the groundwork for Trump's national agenda. We now see the results. In just six months, the Trump presidency has brought white supremacy out of the shadows, emboldened racists, and families torn apart.
Sadly, Arpaio's culture of hate and racism is still embedded in our county. Despite our victories, the collaboration between Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and our county jails is very vivid. Vulnerable members of our community continue to be criminalized and separated from their families.
We know the damage racism and xenophobia can inflict, because we have lived it ourselves. We do not need a repeat of the harsh years under Arpaio, when our community could not step foot outside, when our families' homes were raided, when we saw their faces pressed up against glass windows on a bus that would rip them away from their family.
Don't let Arpaio's Arizona become Trump's America.
Trump is carrying out an agenda that's supremacist, racist, and filled with hate. Our community, together with many others, is not going to stand for it.
Here in Phoenix, we've got a pretty good idea of what lies ahead for America under Donald Trump. It will look less and less like a nation of laws, and more like Sheriff Joe Arpaio's lawless Arizona, unless we do something about it now.
Arpaio was Maricopa County's corrupt sheriff for twenty-four years. During his reign, immigrants and their families were hounded and humiliated. He arrested Latinos because of their names and the color of their skin. He organized an illegal posse to raid workplaces, supermarkets and churches, ripping mothers and fathers away from their families, purely on suspicion they were out of status.
"Arpaio's abuses set the groundwork for Trump's national agenda. We now see the results. In just six months, the Trump presidency has brought white supremacy out of the shadows, emboldened racists, and families torn apart."
Arpaio misappropriated funds, refused to investigate real crimes like rape, and forced detainees to wear pink underwear in an open-air desert compound.
He bragged about spending more to feed his dogs than he did on food for detainees.
Last month, a Federal Court convicted Arpaio of criminal contempt. Finally, we felt, Sheriff Joe was being held to account for violating the rule of law he had so long claimed to uphold.
But for Arizonans, our real victory came six months earlier, when we voted Sheriff Joe out of office. One of his successor's first acts was to close Tent City, the notorious open-air prison Arpaio once proudly called a "concentration camp."
For us at Living United for Change in Arizona (LUCHA), these victories were the culmination of a decade of organizing, alongside grassroots allies and affected community members. I started organizing against Sheriff Joe in 2007 as a volunteer, when I began to see the effects Arpaio's fear tactics were having on immigrant families like my own.
Since 2010, LUCHA's efforts have been focused on voter registration and building political power in the community, to make sure our voices are heard.
When the community Arpaio had terrorized for so long took to the streets and moved Arizona voters to take him out at the ballot box, we were saying, "we've had enough of this bully and his violence in our community, and we won't take it anymore."
Then Donald Trump came to town, and all but promised to pardon Sheriff Joe. "I think he's gonna be just fine," Trump told his rally at the Phoenix Convention Center. "But, but, I won't do it tonight because I don't want to cause any controversy. Is that ok? But Sheriff Joe can feel good."
I was one of the thousands who gathered outside the Convention Center during Trump's speech to peacefully protest his message of hatred and division.
When we heard there might be a pardon for Arpaio, we were outraged. But to tell the truth, we weren't shocked. Because we already knew not to put anything past this president.
The thousands who gathered peacefully in Phoenix were sending a clear and simple message to Trump: "We want you to follow the rule of law."
Let's sit with that for a second.
The community, our community, was telling a sitting president - the President of the United States, our president - to follow the rule of law, when he has demonstrated time and time again that he does not care what voters say, that he does not care what the judicial system says.
Arpaio's abuses set the groundwork for Trump's national agenda. We now see the results. In just six months, the Trump presidency has brought white supremacy out of the shadows, emboldened racists, and families torn apart.
Sadly, Arpaio's culture of hate and racism is still embedded in our county. Despite our victories, the collaboration between Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and our county jails is very vivid. Vulnerable members of our community continue to be criminalized and separated from their families.
We know the damage racism and xenophobia can inflict, because we have lived it ourselves. We do not need a repeat of the harsh years under Arpaio, when our community could not step foot outside, when our families' homes were raided, when we saw their faces pressed up against glass windows on a bus that would rip them away from their family.
Don't let Arpaio's Arizona become Trump's America.
Trump is carrying out an agenda that's supremacist, racist, and filled with hate. Our community, together with many others, is not going to stand for it.