Trump — who issued an executive order that allows for much more deportation, even for those who'd been allowed to check in — and his administration have tossed any humanity out the window. Immigrants who've seen their neighbors targeted by ICE's aggressive police-state tactics and arrested outside schools and churches or inside courthouses now live in a state of fear, afraid to leave their homes, or to cooperate with police or prosecutors on reducing crime in their communities. There is fear of showing up for work at 7-Eleven or checking into a Motel 6. People who've fled drug gangs in El Salvador or dangerous conditions in Haiti have been told the lamp of American liberty no longer shines for them, which is why some are fleeing by way of the Canadian border. Much of this has been fueled by a president's racist stereotypes and his willingness to not only play to the worst prejudices of voters but to bring xenophobes like Miller into the White House.