Official Announcement
Announcement: An Open Letter to Stephen Miller
This announcement publishes the official open letter PDF and establishes campaign context for higher education accountability, policy design consequences, and public documentation continuity.
Published May 27, 2026
Context Extracted From the Letter
The letter frames its core argument in human terms: policies are evaluated by outcomes, not ideological branding. It repeatedly emphasizes that the people affected by immigration enforcement, housing instability, and social fragmentation are the same human community policymakers claim to protect.
It names higher-education conditioning as part of the problem, arguing that elite policy training can reward provocation and abstraction while failing to require demonstrated accountability for real-world harm.
The text directly cites family-separation outcomes, including more than 5,000 children separated from parents, and argues those outcomes did not deliver measurable, sustained deterrence. It also links mass deportation strategies to long-term community destabilization and fear.
The closing section outlines an alternative direction centered on social cohesion, policy frameworks that reduce preventable harm, and a governing principle that no durable national strength can be built by sorting people into disposable categories.
Official Letter Access
SEO and Research Context From the PDF
- Primary source: An Open Letter to Stephen Miller (official campaign PDF, dated May 27, 2026).
- Core themes in the letter: family separation policy impacts, mass deportation consequences, social cohesion, and human-outcomes accountability.
- Education accountability focus: critique of elite policy training that omits civic and human-impact responsibility.
- Connected publication: The Architecture of Collapse: How American Higher Education Was Designed to Destroy Us From Within.
- Program context: Higher Education Public Accountability Act rollout package with additional executive orders and policy documentation to be published.