The Supreme Court’s decision to lift the injunction against ending Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelans marks a brutal turning point in America’s immigration wars. With an 8–1 majority, the justices effectively blessed the administration’s power to reverse Biden-era protections and move swiftly to deport roughly 300,000 people who had been told this country was their temporary refuge. Behind the legal language lies raw human fallout: parents who built lives under TPS now weighing whether to wait for a knock at the door or flee into the shadows, children wondering if their schools, churches, and neighborhoods will vanish overnight. Supporters of the ruling insist the executive must control immigration in the national interest. Opponents see a cold political calculation wrapped in legal deference. What’s certain is that, after this ruling, every migrant protected by policy rather than law knows just how fragile “temporary” truly is.
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