What began as a promise to “restore order” has become a daily referendum on power. In some neighborhoods, parents finally let their kids walk to the corner store again. Shopkeepers quietly admit business is better when people aren’t afraid to step outside. The numbers back it up: fewer break-ins, fewer robberies, fewer desperate calls to 911 in the middle of the night. Yet behind those statistics are doors that stay shut when federal agents roll past, and phones that go dark the moment a knock sounds too hard, too late.
For immigrant families, each patrol car is a question mark hanging over their future. Longtime residents argue on porches about whether this is protection or punishment. The city’s political class calls it a “temporary measure,” but history rarely treats temporary power as a guest that leaves on time. Washington is learning, in real time, that safety can be weaponized—and that the line between being protected and being controlled is thinner than anyone wanted to believe.