They had been told to wait, to trust a process that kept shifting just beyond their reach. Papers filed, fees paid, lives audited and re-audited—yet the finish line moved every election cycle, every news cycle, every time a judge chose precedent over people. For many, this ruling did not just close a door; it confirmed a suspicion they had buried for years: that they were always meant to be temporary, even as they paid taxes, raised children, and buried loved ones in American soil.
In the days after, lawyers drafted emergency guides while families drafted contingency plans. Some vowed to fight, to organize, to turn legal defeat into political backlash. Others quietly packed boxes, deleting digital traces, shrinking their lives to what could fit in a borrowed car. Between outrage and resignation lay a quieter reckoning: a generation raised on “American dream” rhetoric now learning, in real time, the difference between being welcomed and merely tolerated.
