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Community Corner

Who’s Fighting for Us? The Forgotten Struggle of Black Americans

While others receive urgent advocacy, Black Americans still face mass incarceration, over-policing, and systemic neglect.

Who’s Fighting for Us? The Forgotten Struggle of Black Americans in the Immigration Debate

In today’s heated immigration debate, one truth remains painfully clear: Black Americans have been fighting for their rights for centuries, yet their suffering continues to be ignored while others are prioritized.

We hear passionate calls for protecting undocumented immigrants, ensuring their dignity, and providing them with legal aid. We see protests, political movements, and national conversations centered around their plight. But where is that same urgency when it comes to Black Americans, who have endured systemic oppression in this country for generations?

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The Double Standard in Justice and Advocacy

No one is condoning violations of human rights, nor are we suggesting that anyone be mistreated. But let’s be honest—no country in the world allows people to enter illegally without consequences. If an American were to enter another country without documentation, they would likely be deported, detained, or imprisoned.

Yet, when the U.S. enforces its immigration laws, it is deemed inhumane. Meanwhile, Black Americans—who are legal citizens of this country—are thrown into a prison system at disproportionately high rates, face daily police harassment, and are denied economic opportunities.

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The same politicians and organizations who advocate tirelessly for undocumented individuals seem to be absent when it comes to fighting for the millions of Black people suffering under systemic oppression, over-policing, and economic disenfranchisement.

Why is there an endless push to create protections for one group, while another—who has been here for generations—remains neglected?

Mass Incarceration: America’s Permanent Prison for Black People

We talk about immigrant detention centers, but what about the mass incarceration of Black men and women?

Here are the facts:

  • Black Americans make up only 13.6% of the U.S. population but account for nearly 38% of the prison population.
  • 1 in 3 Black men will be incarcerated at some point in their lifetime.
  • Decades of over-policing, the War on Drugs, and harsh sentencing laws have trapped millions of Black people in a cycle of poverty, criminalization, and disenfranchisement.

Yet, while immigration policies spark national protests, the permanent imprisonment of Black Americans remains a silent crisis.

Where are the calls for justice? Where are the human rights organizations fighting for the release of our fathers, brothers, and sons who have been unfairly locked away?

The "Virtual Prisons" of Black Neighborhoods

If you want to see a modern-day prison, take a drive through Bradley Court in Newark, NJ, or any predominantly Black inner-city neighborhood in America.

  • Constant police presence.
  • Endless stop-and-frisk encounters.
  • Tactics designed to criminalize everyday life.

For many Black Americans, their neighborhoods feel like occupied territories, where law enforcement acts more like an invading army than a protective force.
The same police forces that receive scrutiny for their treatment of undocumented immigrants are rarely held accountable for their brutality against Black Americans.
Why does America ignore the human rights violations happening right here, every single day?

Black Disabled, Poor, and Mentally Ill: The Forgotten Victims

Another harsh reality: Black Americans who are physically disabled, mentally ill, or struggling with poverty are some of the most ignored people in this country.

  • They are more likely to be brutalized by police.
  • They are less likely to receive mental health services.
  • They are frequently left without housing, medical care, or legal protection.

Meanwhile, we see resources being poured into shelters and services for newly arrived immigrants, while Black Americans who have lived here their entire lives are left to fend for themselves.

Who’s Advocating for Black Americans?

This is the question that needs to be asked!

While other groups receive special protections, who is standing up for:

  • The Black men and women sitting in U.S. prisons for non-violent offenses?
  • The Black families torn apart by over-policing and mass incarceration?
  • The Black children trapped in failing school systems, with no real future?
  • The Black disabled and mentally ill individuals who are brutalized and ignored?

We are not saying that immigrants don’t deserve rights, but why does everyone else’s struggle take priority over our own?

Final Thoughts: The Time for Silence Is Over

The reality is this: Black Americans have fought for centuries for the rights that others now demand without hesitation.

Before America rushes to accommodate others, it must first address the centuries-old injustices against its own citizens.

We need to make this issue heard. We need to start asking:

  • Why is our suffering overlooked?
  • Why are our neighborhoods over-policed?
  • Why are our men locked away in prisons?
  • Why are our disabled and mentally ill abandoned?

The time for silence is over. It’s time to demand the same level of urgency for Black Americans that we see given to everyone else.

DISCLAIMER:

This article is not intended to diminish the struggles of immigrants or suggest that they should be denied basic human rights. However, it is meant to highlight the hypocrisy in how Black Americans' ongoing oppression is continuously overlooked while national attention is given to other issues. Advocacy should be equitable, ensuring that the people who built this country—who continue to suffer today—receive the justice and opportunities they deserve.
Share this message. Speak out. Demand justice. Because if we don’t fight for ourselves, no one else will.

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