A recent case in Texas has sparked a significant debate over civil liberties and protest rights. Several anti-ICE protesters received lengthy prison sentences after a protest turned violent, with one defendant sentenced to 100 years for wounding an officer. #CivilLiberties

The controversy centers on the use of a broad terrorism theory by prosecutors, which included evidence like encrypted chats... https://instagr.am/p/DaJ214NgT5a/
voteinorout on Instagram: "A recent case in Texas has sparked a significant debate over civil liberties and protest rights. Several anti-ICE protesters received lengthy prison sentences after a protest turned violent, with one defendant sentenced to 100 years for wounding an officer. #CivilLiberties⁠ ⁠ The controversy centers on the use of a broad terrorism theory by prosecutors, which included evidence like encrypted chats, clothing, and group associations. Critics argue this approach risks criminalizing ideology and peaceful protest activities. The case raises questions about how far the government can go in linking individual acts of violence to broader political beliefs and associations.⁠ ⁠ Comment LINK (on instagram) and we will DM you the link to @jerrodzisser https://www.instagram.com/reel/DZ8rRHOhXew/⁠ ⁠ --⁠ ⁠ BREAKING NEWS & PSA: ⁠ THE TERRORISM CASE THAT COULD CHANGE PROTEST RIGHTS⁠ ⁠ this case is now raising a much bigger civil liberties question: when does prosecuting violence become criminalizing ideology, clothing, Signal chats, reading material, body armor, or association?⁠ ⁠ That matters for peaceful protesters.⁠ It matters for independent journalists.⁠ And it matters for anyone who uses encrypted chats, protective gear, or political material while covering or attending demonstrations.⁠ ⁠ Violence should be prosecuted. But beliefs, books, clothing, and safety gear should not become proof of terrorism by themselves.⁠ ⁠ Follow @jerrodzisser for more. Help this information get to more voters. 🇺🇸 A well-informed electorate is a prerequisite to Democracy. - Thomas Jefferson #usapolitics"

95 likes, 1 comments - voteinorout on June 28, 2026: "A recent case in Texas has sparked a significant debate over civil liberties and protest rights. Several anti-ICE protesters received lengthy prison sentences after a protest turned violent, with one defendant sentenced to 100 years for wounding an officer. #CivilLiberties⁠ ⁠ The controversy centers on the use of a broad terrorism theory by prosecutors, which included evidence like encrypted chats, clothing, and group associations. Critics argue this approach risks criminalizing ideology and peaceful protest activities. The case raises questions about how far the government can go in linking individual acts of violence to broader political beliefs and associations.⁠ ⁠ Comment LINK (on instagram) and we will DM you the link to @jerrodzisser https://www.instagram.com/reel/DZ8rRHOhXew/⁠ ⁠ --⁠ ⁠ BREAKING NEWS & PSA: ⁠ THE TERRORISM CASE THAT COULD CHANGE PROTEST RIGHTS⁠ ⁠ this case is now raising a much bigger civil liberties question: when does prosecuting violence become criminalizing ideology, clothing, Signal chats, reading material, body armor, or association?⁠ ⁠ That matters for peaceful protesters.⁠ It matters for independent journalists.⁠ And it matters for anyone who uses encrypted chats, protective gear, or political material while covering or attending demonstrations.⁠ ⁠ Violence should be prosecuted. But beliefs, books, clothing, and safety gear should not become proof of terrorism by themselves.⁠ ⁠ Follow @jerrodzisser for more. Help this information get to more voters. 🇺🇸 A well-informed electorate is a prerequisite to Democracy. - Thomas Jefferson #usapolitics".

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The Language of Enemies

President Donald Trump has once again reached for one of the oldest political tools in history: the creation of an internal enemy. In a recent Truth Social post, he declared, “The Communists are finally making their move… I’ve been waiting and preparing for this for a long time… The game is on. Enjoy watching.” The statement followed Democratic primary victories by candidates associated with the democratic socialist wing of the Democratic Party. While it does not announce a specific government action, it should give Americans pause. The words themselves matter.

The United States has a long history of anti-communist politics. During the Cold War, concerns about espionage by the Soviet Union were real. But there is a significant difference between opposing a foreign adversary and using the label “communist” as a catch-all description for domestic political opponents.

History teaches that when governments begin describing fellow citizens as existential enemies rather than political rivals, civil liberties often become casualties.

That does not mean arrests are imminent. It does not mean martial law is around the corner. It does mean Americans should pay attention whenever a president suggests he has been “preparing” for a confrontation with a vaguely defined group of people inside the country. Without clear definitions, almost anyone can be placed into that category.

Who, exactly, is a communist?

Is it a registered member of a revolutionary Marxist party?

Someone who favors universal health care?

A labor organizer?

A college professor?

A Democratic Socialist?

A journalist critical of the administration?

The danger lies in the ambiguity. Labels become flexible enough to fit whatever target is politically convenient.

The United States has experienced this before. During the era commonly known as the Red Scare, accusations alone destroyed careers, reputations, and lives. Loyalty tests replaced evidence. Suspicion replaced due process. The nation eventually looked back on that period as one of fear rather than strength.

That history is worth remembering.

Presidents possess extraordinary influence over public opinion. Their words shape not only political debate but also the priorities of federal agencies, law enforcement, and supporters. Even when no immediate policy follows, repeated rhetoric can normalize the idea that political disagreement is not simply disagreement but evidence of disloyalty.

Democracy depends upon the opposite principle.

It assumes citizens will disagree—sometimes passionately—about taxes, foreign policy, immigration, labor rights, social welfare, and the role of government. Those disagreements are resolved through elections, courts, legislation, and public debate, not by portraying one side as an enemy to be defeated by extraordinary means.

There is another concern as well.

Throughout history, leaders facing political challenges have often found it useful to redefine elections as battles for national survival. Once politics becomes an existential struggle between patriots and enemies, compromise becomes betrayal and constitutional restraints begin to look like obstacles rather than safeguards.

That is not unique to one ideology or one nation. It has happened under governments of many different political stripes.

Americans should therefore resist the temptation to dismiss language like this as merely another social media post. Words are often the first step in preparing the public for future actions, even if those actions never materialize. Responsible citizens should neither panic nor ignore them.

The proper response is vigilance.

Ask questions.

Demand definitions.

Insist that accusations be supported by evidence rather than slogans.

And remember that the Constitution protects Americans because of their rights—not because of their politics.

Whether one supports Donald Trump, opposes him, or falls somewhere in between, the principle remains the same. A free republic is strongest when political opponents remain opponents—not enemies.

#CivilLiberties #Democracy #donaldTrump #McCarthyism #politicalRhetoric #TruthSocial #WPSNews

She posted about ICE. Five months later, DHS agents told her to take her post down Source: GPB News

https://www.gpb.org/news/2026/06/26/she-posted-about-ice-five-months-later-dhs-agents-told-her-take-her-post-down

#ICE #CivilLiberties

She posted about ICE. Five months later, DHS agents told her to take her post down

In January, Paigelynne Gonyea posted about the immigration surge in Minneapolis. This week, she was visited by ICE officials who claimed one of her posts had doxxed a federal agent.

Georgia Public Broadcasting
British Police Built a Sprawling Crime-Prediction Machine. Some Results Couldn’t Be Trusted

As UK police embrace the AI revolution, a WIRED investigation reveals the messy inside story of one region’s experiment with predictive analytics.

WIRED
Kelly Hayes interviews Rebecca Solnit. “There is no rewind button on #history. Once people have #power & agency, and have seen what it’s like to have #rights, #votingrights, #reproductiverights, they’re not interested in going back. And we’re the #majority.” #politics #SCOTUS #democracy #maga #gop #trump #civilliberties #constitution #freedom https://truthout.org/audio/hope-is-not-naive-rebecca-solnit-on-backlash-power-and-political-memory/ #hope #resilience #government #history
Hope Is Not Naive: Rebecca Solnit on Backlash, Power, and Political Memory

“What if changing the world looked more like care than like war,” asks writer Rebecca Solnit.

Truthout
Texas man sentenced to 30 years for transporting pamphlets

Draconian sentence threatens journalists and news consumers

Freedom of the Press

Hey all you Californians who care about privacy and government over-reach!

AB 2047 will criminalize an entire class of people who own 3D printers and don't update them to allow government snooping and throttling.

They say they are worried about guns, but it is not an effective way to go.

California deserves better. This will have undue impact on individuals, education, and industry. It is a stupid idea, it is not thought out, it is unfunded, and it won't accomplish what it claims.

You can voice your opinion here: https://calegislation.lc.ca.gov/Advocates/faces/index.xhtml

#AB2047 #makers #3Dprinting #california #civilLIberties #advocacy #education #industry #news #support

California Legislature Position Letter Portal

Canada should keep its data out of U.S. hands | The-14

Bill C-22 could expose Canadian data to U.S. authorities. Critics warn it risks privacy, digital sovereignty and constitutional rights.

The-14 Pictures

FCC proposal would require telecoms to collect government ID, name, and address for all mobile customers under “Know-Your-Customer” rules. 📵
Privacy advocates warn it could effectively end anonymous “burner phones,” increasing risks for journalists, survivors, and marginalized users. 🔐

🔗 https://www.cnet.com/news/privacy/if-the-fcc-bans-burner-phones-it-could-be-a-privacy-nightmare/

#TechNews #FCC #Privacy #Surveillance #Telecom #DigitalRights #CyberSecurity #DataPrivacy #CivilLiberties #Encryption #Policy #MobileSecurity #Mobile #USA #US #Trump

If the FCC Bans Burner Phones, It Could Be a Privacy Nightmare

Proposed rules would require every mobile customer to provide a government ID. Experts warn the move could effectively end anonymous phone service in the US.

CNET

Canada passes Bill C-22, expanding lawful access powers for law enforcement to obtain digital information under judicial warrants. 📜
The law enables secret metadata retention orders and system access requirements for providers, raising ongoing encryption and oversight concerns. 🔐

🔗 https://globalnews.ca/news/11911957/lawful-access-bill-passes-privacy-liberals-tinfoil-hat/

#TechNews #Canada #Privacy #Surveillance #LawfulAccess #Law #CyberSecurity #Encryption #DataProtection #DigitalRights #Policy #CivilLiberties #BigTech

Liberals dismiss ‘tinfoil hat’ privacy fears as lawful access bill passes

Conservatives and other opposition parties sought to address privacy concerns in Bill C-22, but the Liberal government shut down debate and fast-tracked the bill.

Global News