In a letter penned from a federal detention facility in Louisiana, pro-Palestinian activist and political prisoner Mahmoud Khalil posed a simple and urgent question: “Who has the right to have rights?” If we ask the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, which guarantee due process and equal protection, the answer is clear: people do.
Not citizens, but people.
The Trump administration is violating this principle by punishing student organizers like Khalil, Rumeysa Ozturk and Mohsen Mahdawi as part of its broader campaign against immigrants. These arrests are grave constitutional violations, each further eroding the fragile state of our collective civil rights.
Over the last two years, I’ve written op-eds about the horrors of the Israeli government’s genocidal campaign in Gaza, protested with Students for Justice in Palestine, participated in Seders led by Jewish Voice for Peace and joined the encampment on Northrop Lawn.
I’ve taken these actions because I am a humanist and an American taxpayer who refuses to believe the intentional starvation and extermination of an entire population can ever be justified.
It’s not more complicated than that.
What about these beliefs change because I happened to be born a U.S. citizen?
That is the legal distinction between myself, Khalil, Ozturk, Mahdawi and the thousands of immigrants who have been wrongfully detained and targeted since January. When we set aside how we are recognized by the state, our actions remain the same.
The consequences of this widening dragnet of fascism are unfolding around us.
One of the 11 University of Minnesota students whose legal status was terminated, Doğukan Günaydın, has been held in Sherburne County jail for over a month. Rather than fighting for its own student’s release, this administration is helping to facilitate the training of his captors by leasing a gun range to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
An immigration judge ruled that the Department of Homeland Security failed to make a case for his removal, yet he remains in ICE custody because he is a “danger to public safety.” Their evidence? A misdemeanor drunk driving ticket from 2023.
The point is not to excuse the offense, but to remind us that perfection is not a prerequisite for deserving constitutional protection.
An estimated one in seven Minnesotans have a DWI on their record. Should their rights be stripped away too?
From the American South to Nazi Germany, fascist governments have redrawn the boundaries of citizenship to justify oppression and consolidate power. This power struggle plays out first on the bodies and lives of vulnerable people.
That’s the beauty of due process, which requires the government to follow strict procedures before depriving anyone of their rights. It does not assume guilt or innocence. It demands integrity from the legal system the public can trust. Equal protection was brought about as an enforcement mechanism to animate due process in reluctant states following the abolition of slavery.
Some of the most regrettable rulings passed down from the Supreme Court involve the denial of citizenship and the narrowing of rights to disenfranchised people who are not nondisabled, landowning white men.
And for the most part, the Court has taken these lessons seriously. It is widely held that denying constitutional protections to people solely based on their nation of origin causes needless harm and undermines our shared humanity. The very document used to deny civil rights has also been essential to expanding them.
The Constitution is both limiting and limitless, depending on who’s reading it. It carries the deep contradictions of this country, and in that paradox lies the seriousness of our obligation to defend each other when these protections come under threat.
How we uphold these principles for one will determine how the government treats us all.
The University claims to be a refuge for people from every marginalized background. Indeed, the depth, breadth and diversity of our intellectual community is what I love most about learning here. But their promises ring hollow when they continue to enforce draconian, reactionary rules that sanction departments, silence research centers, punish student groups for disrupting the status quo and rescind job offers to scholars for exercising their rights to speak, think and assemble freely.
If the federal government wants to attack universities in broad daylight, let it. Their fixation on our campus makes it a site of power, and we are well-positioned to resist.
A bully like Donald Trump seeks compliance, not cooperation, with his vision for our institution. Weaponizing citizenship is just another desperate attempt to silence dissent and assert his power.
To students, faculty, staff, alumni, administrators and the community at large, the question Khalil asked from his detention cell remains. If we want to preserve what remains of our democracy, we cannot be afraid to answer: Who here has the right to have rights, and how will we defend them?
Kelly Rogers is an Urban Studies undergraduate in the College of Liberal Arts and a former opinions columnist for the Minnesota Daily.
KG
Jun 2, 2025 at 1:16 pm
Get Help—seriously, get mental help—urgently. Your anti-Semitic hatred of Jews and Israel is glaringly obvious and deeply disturbing. The media’s latest shrill cries about “14,000 starving babies” are just another blatant lie. Where are the pictures of starving babies with distended bellies? Nowhere. Nobody believes these fabrications anymore—except, perhaps, the Arab-backed UN agencies and NGOs that perpetuate these falsehoods, echoing each other to deceive the naïve and ignorant, and to earn petrodollar salaries and their next professional promotion.
You parrot numbers like “50,000 dead since October 7” without scrutiny. How many were combatants? Estimates suggest roughly half were Hamas terrorists. The rest? Palestinian civilians—human shields that Hamas forced into danger or deliberately used for cover. Now, Hamas is replenishing its depleted ranks by exploiting child soldiers, brainwashed in Gaza’s hate-filled, Hamas-run kindergartens with one goal: to kill Jews. If you genuinely cared about Palestinian lives, you’d be protesting against Hamas, not Israel.
Why aren’t you concerned about universities and public schools turned into rocket launch sites, hospitals used as ammo dumps, or private homes with children’s bedrooms hiding Hamas rockets? Using civilian infrastructure for military purposes turns it into a valid military target, according to international law. Why aren’t you questioning the billions Hamas spent on hundreds of miles of military tunnels, crisscrossing Gaza and converting it into a fortress of terror rather than a thriving society?
You prefer to focus on events since October 7, so let’s talk about what happened ON OCTOBER 7. Heavily armed Hamas terrorists from Gaza—where no Jews lived—crossed a peaceful border into Israel and unleashed unimaginable horror. They attacked villages and a music festival, systematically raping, burning, and murdering civilians, mutilating bodies, and kidnapping hundreds into Gaza. Their victims included Jews, Muslims, Arabs, Hindus, and even people who had devoted their lives to fostering peace between Palestinians and Jews. To date, Hamas has fired 13,000 rockets into Israel. Hamas started this war. Hamas is responsible for the devastation. Only when Hamas is eradicated will there be a chance for Jews and Palestinians to live side by side in peace.
And let’s not ignore the ripple effects here in the United States. The anti-Semitic rhetoric of you and your ilk fuels violence. Two Jews were murdered on May 21 at a Washington, D.C. museum by Elias Rodriguez, claiming he did it “for Gaza” and “free Palestine.” And now we have the Boulder attack on Jews. In Minneapolis, Hillel’s windows were shot out in June 2024, and the perpetrator remains at large. Jewish students at UMN have reported threats of bodily harm to MPD. Get Help—your antisemitism isn’t just words. It incites violence, spreads hate, and perpetuates suffering. Your wrath is misdirected. It’s time to face the real enemy: Hamas. But I fear your pathology is more fundamental: its antisemitism. You should check yourself into Boynton.
TA
May 28, 2025 at 11:50 am
Get Help –
Maybe the Palestinians and Hamas could stop shooting rockets at Israel and committing massacres first? Just a thought.
At any rate, you’re not an intelligent person.
Get Help
May 21, 2025 at 11:45 am
KG — You must be completely removed from reality to believe the garbage you spew under these comment sections. How dare you deny the systematic starvation of Palestinans? Bombing universities, public schools, hospitals, critical public infrastructure, refugee camps, humanitarian organizations, journalists, not to mention homes…this is genocide. More than 50,000 Palestinians dead SINCE OCTOBER 7 (not in total) is horiffic. The millions of others left to live through the horrors of constant bombardment and starvation…horiffic. Using islamophobic rhetoric to justify their deaths speaks to your depravity. The best way to stop the bombs is for Israel to stop bombing. Full stop. You adopt the framing of this issue with the most dehumanizing rhetoric and claim its objective truth. Your beliefs are in conflict with Doctors Without Borders, Amnesty International, the United Nations, the Pope, the World Health Organization, UNRWA, the Red Cross, World Central Kitchen, UNICEF, and Human Rights Watch among other international humanitarian organizations. Does that not give you pause? I worry for anyone who could possibly justify this mass death and genocide for any reason EVER. It is an indictment of our humanity. Netanyahu is only sustaining this because he knows he will be arrested and tried for the ungodly war crimes he has committed. And to do so in the name of the Jewish people who are themselves traumatized by this kind of violence…I pray for your rotten soul. Google “Israel partially lifts Gaza aid blockade and launches new offensive” and watch that footage and live with yourself.
KG
May 15, 2025 at 12:39 pm
Repeating lies does not make them valid. No, Israel is not committing genocide in Gaza. On October 7, 2023, Hamas, the governing authority in Gaza, launched an unprovoked attack on Israel, targeting unarmed civilians with systematic acts of rape, torture, mutilation, and murder. These atrocities are comparable to the horrors committed by the Arab militia in Sudan, as reported by Nicholas Kristof in The New York Times (“When Gunmen Impose a Policy of Rape,” Sept. 21, 2024).
No, there is no starvation in Gaza. Hamas has been amply documented denying United Nations food supplies to its own population, hoarding them for its operatives. If true famine were present, where are the images of children with distended bellies, the grim hallmarks of starvation that have sadly become familiar in other crises? They do not exist. There was a recent interview in The Guardian with a woman who claimed her child with congenital digestive issues was suffering from hunger. Is that truly the strongest case for widespread starvation?
Yes, the toll of war is devastating. Many Gazans have lost their lives, and many Israelis have, too. Gazans have been displaced, and Israelis have faced the same fate. But equating Hamas, an Islamist terrorist organization, with Palestinian political aspirations is a blatant distortion. This false equivalence erases the reality of Hamas’s genocidal intent toward Israel. For nearly two decades, Hamas has governed Gaza with no Jews present in the territory. Yet, instead of building schools, hospitals, and a functioning society, Hamas has funneled resources into rockets and tunnels designed solely for Israel’s destruction.
If you care about Palestine, direct your outrage at Hamas. Protest against Hamas’ violent rule and Hamas’ exploitation of Palestinian civilians as human shields. The path to ending this war is clear: Hamas must disarm, release the hostages, and relinquish control of Gaza. Algeria has even been floated as a potential destination for their exodus. Until this happens, the suffering of Gaza’s civilians will tragically continue.