When the State Knocks On The Door
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About this listen
This episode isn’t a debate — it’s a threshold.
We’re stepping into uncomfortable, unmarked territory where questions don’t have clean answers and certainty feels irresponsible. This is a reflection on power, fear, and how easily we learn to justify force when it’s aimed at people we’ve already decided are the problem.
I talk about borders, immigration enforcement, and ICE — but more than that, I talk about how we decide when state power feels “necessary,” when delay becomes cruelty, and when order quietly replaces justice. I wrestle with the difference between enforcing law and enforcing identity, and why faith has made me less comfortable — not more — with unchecked authority.
There’s also a hard look at something many of us avoid: why we condemn the use of tear gas, batons, and water cannons during the civil rights era, yet praise the same tactics today. What changed? The tools — or our sympathies?
This isn’t a manifesto.
It isn’t a hot take.
And it isn’t meant to land neatly.
It’s an honest attempt to stay awake — to notice when fear starts asking for permission, and when applause replaces reflection.
If you’re looking for answers, you may not find them here.
If you’re willing to sit with the questions, you’re in the right place.