• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • My Account
  • Subscribe
  • Log In
  • News
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Lifestyle
  • Police/Fire
  • Government
  • Obituaries
  • Archives
  • E-Edition
  • Help
Itemlive

Itemlive

North Shore news powered by The Daily Item

Johnson: Quiet death of dissent

Guest Commentary

April 25, 2025 by Guest Commentary

F. Willis Johnson

There is something particularly American about the way we’re dismantling our democracy these days – we are doing it with paperwork. While the world watches our grand political theater, immigration agents are quietly canceling visas, filling out deportation orders, and reshaping the boundaries of acceptable speech without firing a single shot.

I think about Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian activist and Columbia graduate who committed no crime beyond speaking his mind. I think about Rumeysa Ozturk, a doctoral student at Tufts whose academic career hangs by a thread. I think about the estimated 300 international students whose visas are under review or already revoked for daring to participate in First Amendment exercises on campus across the United States. These stories are not just about immigration status but about who is American enough to participate in its democracy and under what conditions.

We are experiencing the weaponization of the First Amendment. It’s a familiar pattern to those of us who study American history. When direct censorship becomes too apparent, too constitutionally questionable, the state machinery finds other ways to silence dissenting voices.

During the Red Scare, it was deportation orders against immigrant labor organizers. During the Civil Rights Movement, local ordinances were selectively enforced against protesters. Now, it’s the calculated use of immigration law to chill political speech.

The genius of our government’s approach – and I use that word with all the bitterness it deserves – is its apparent neutrality. Federal authorities assure us no one is being arrested for their speech. These are simply routine immigration matters.

But there’s nothing routine about the pattern emerging before our eyes: speak too loudly about specific issues, challenge the wrong policies, and suddenly, your paperwork receives extra scrutiny. One’s visa status becomes questionable. Another’s right to remain in a country you’ve made your home becomes uncertain.

Happening now is a test of our democratic character. When we allow the government to use administrative procedures to silence voices it doesn’t want to hear, we’re not just failing those directly affected. We’re failing the very principle of free speech that we claim makes America exceptional.

The fundamental irony should not escape us that many of these deportation threats target students and scholars at leading universities. Institutions that we proudly claim as bastions of free inquiry and open debate. When we invite bright minds to our shores, we send conflicted messages worldwide, only to expel them when they engage in the democratic practices we claim to champion.

We must fully accept that the state of our democratic republic and its values are seriously in question. Free speech only truly applies to citizens. Citizens who speak in ways that don’t challenge power, especially Whiteness, too directly. When did we decide the First Amendment was too dangerous to extend to everyone within our borders?

Rev. Dr. F. Willis Johnson is a spiritual entrepreneur, author, scholar-practioner whose leadership and strategies around social and racial justice issues are nationally recognized and applied.

  • Guest Commentary
    Guest Commentary

    View all posts

Related posts:

No related posts.

Primary Sidebar

Advertisement

RELATED POSTS:

No related posts.

Sponsored Content

What questions should I ask when choosing a health plan?

Building Customer Loyalty Through Personalized Shopping Experiences

Advertisement

Footer

About Us

  • About Us
  • Editorial Practices
  • Advertising and Sponsored Content

Reader Services

  • Subscribe
  • Manage Your Subscription
  • Activate Subscriber Account
  • Submit an Obituary
  • Submit a Classified Ad
  • Daily Item Photo Store
  • Submit A Tip
  • Contact
  • Terms and Conditions

Essex Media Group Publications

  • La Voz
  • Lynnfield Weekly News
  • Marblehead Weekly News
  • Peabody Weekly News
  • 01907 The Magazine
  • 01940 The Magazine
  • 01945 The Magazine
  • North Shore Golf Magazine

© 2025 Essex Media Group