President Trump orders troops to Portland, Oregon, amid pushback
Trump said on social media he’s sending troops to Portland, Oregon, to protect immigration facilities. Oregon officials call the action illegal and unwarranted.
- The protest organized by the immigration advocacy group Make The Road was centered around the technology platform ImmigrationOS.
- ImmigrationOS was developed by the software company Palantir Technologies, co-founded by tech billionaire and Donald Trump ally Peter Thiel.
Protesters took to the streets of Newark on Sept. 29 to send a message: No to ICE surveillance database.
The protest organized by the immigration advocacy group Make The Road was centered around the technology platform ImmigrationOS, developed by the software company Palantir Technologies, co-founded by tech billionaire and Donald Trump ally Peter Thiel.
The Trump Administration awarded a $30 million contract in April to Palantir to develop the software that tracks people who plan to self-deport and target gang members and those who have overstayed their visas. That will be done by collecting biographical and biometric data from government databases to identify immigrants.
Palantir was scheduled to provide a prototype of ImmigrationOS to ICE on September 25. It will be used by ICE for two years, according to the contract.
The attendees at the protest, which occurred a few miles away from Delaney Hall, the immigration detention center operated on the outskirts of Newark by ICE, expressed their concerns that the software could target immigrants, irrespective of status, and violate their human rights.
“Here in New Jersey, we believe in democracy and we believe in freedom,” Nedia Morsy, executive director of Make The Road New Jersey, said before a press conference at Newark’s Military Park. She called for the state to divest from investing pension fund money in Palentir.
Larry Hamm, the founder the Newark activist group People’s Organization for Progress, said the Palantir database is not just an immigrant problem but a problem for everyone.
“Immigrant rights are human rights,” he said.
After the press conference, the protesters marched several long blocks across downtown Newark to Lincoln Park.
Ricardo Kaulessar covers race, immigration, and culture for NorthJersey.com. For unlimited access to the most important news from your local community, please subscribe or activate your digital account today.
Email: kaulessar@northjersey.com
Twitter/X: @ricardokaul