We are a city of laws not of moods, not of headlines, not of whoever controls the narrative on any given day. That bedrock principle should guide how we respond to the very real discomfort many of us feel about federal immigration enforcement operating under a presidential order. Whether you cheer or scorn Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the answer is not to pick and choose which laws we respect. Our civic duty is to uphold the rule of law while insisting that those laws be enforced fairly, transparently, and humanely.
New York has long been a refuge for the world. People who arrived here legally by ship, plane, or painstaking paperwork built neighborhoods, businesses, schools and an idea of what this country can be at its best. That history deserves our pride. It also demands clarity now. In recent months our city has received people who crossed our borders under chaotic circumstances and were relocated here as part of national political maneuvering. Some arrived properly vetted; others, the reports say, received little background checking and came with unknown histories. That is a legitimate concern for every resident who pays taxes, sends kids to public schools, rides the subway and expects a basic level of safety.
Advocates for immigrants play an essential role. They help newcomers navigate a complex system, fight unjust deportations, and call attention to human suffering. Many advocates are themselves immigrants or the children of immigrants. Their voices are rooted in deep, valuable experience. But advocacy cannot substitute for accountability. Communities have a right to know who is living among them and whether public funds and services are being stretched in ways that jeopardize public safety or community cohesion. We can and must demand humane enforcement that still protects residents and enforces our laws.
This columnist also believes firmly that people must not interfere with law enforcement when officers local, state, or federal are lawfully carrying out their duties. Anyone who physically obstructs, assaults, threatens, or otherwise impedes officers should be arrested and prosecuted to the fullest extent permitted by law. Enforcement should be swift, transparent, and consistent, no matter how offended or upset someone may be. That insistence is not about vindictiveness; it is about preserving public order and protecting both officers and civilians. At the same time, those prosecutions must follow constitutional due process arrests and charges, not extrajudicial punishment.
To pretend there is no difference between lawful immigrants and those who have not followed immigration procedures is a mistake that erodes the value of citizenship. Voting, for example, should remain the prerogative of citizens, except where local laws expressly provide otherwise. Public benefits should be distributed according to law and designed to help people become contributors to their communities, not to create incentives for lawbreaking. Those who overstay visas should be given clear pathways to resolve their status or face orderly enforcement. Those who commit crimes must be held accountable. These are not heartless positions; they are the safeguards of a community where opportunity and order coexist.
The practical path forward is not to vilify whole groups or to accept lawlessness in the name of compassion. It is to demand a federal immigration policy that is coherent, humane, and enforceable and to require transparency about how individuals are vetted before being relocated to our city. It is to strengthen local support systems that help newcomers integrate: language services, job training, and legal assistance. It is to insist on robust oversight of enforcement agencies and to ensure that constitutional rights are respected at every step.
If we love New York for its openness, we must also love it enough to protect the principles that make that openness meaningful. Upholding the law does not mean abandoning compassion. It means insisting on a system in which laws are enforced fairly, people are treated with dignity, and the responsibilities of citizenship are honored. That is the only way our city can remain a place of refuge and a place of order both at once.







