Americans tweet Trump to deport ex-partners
New social media trend sees jilted lovers tweet President-elect revealing illegal status of former beaus

Miami: Americans have found a mean-spirited, tongue-in-cheek way to
get even when a relationship turns bad — send a tweet saying they hope
US President-elect Donald Trump does not deport their ex, but revealing
their undocumented status and even their home address.
“I hope
Donald Trump doesn’t deport my illegal Dominican ex,” wrote
@eddiecabanas, who then gave the apartment address in Kentucky, with the
specific note this person lives “at the top of the stairs.”
Trump
took a hard line against illegal immigration during his campaign,
vowing to deport more than two million undocumented immigrants with
criminal records after he takes office on January 20.
His promises
have raised fears of deportation among the undocumented, most of them
from Latin America, and estimated at 11 million in the country.
Some
universities have declared sanctuaries for undocumented people and
consultations with human rights organizations and immigration lawyers
have been on the rise.
In that context, spurned, disenchanted and
angry former husbands, wives, girlfriends, boyfriends and partners have
taken to Twitter to attack exes, knowing that Trump, @realDonaldTrump,
is an avid user of the social network.
“Oh no! Trump please dont
deport my ex-boyfriend Sergio, who lives @... in Davie, Florida...
apartment number...,” wrote @Marco_Rosano. AFP has omitted the address
details, out of privacy concerns.
The vengeful tweets — posted by
users in Florida, New York, California and across the country — sound
sarcastic, using a formula to out an ex apparently by expressing just
the opposite.
“I’m afraid Trump might deport my illegal Swedish
ex-gf who cheated on me twice & lives at... & keeps a hide-a-key
under the mat,” wrote one Twitter user.
Tweets like these are mushrooming on the internet as worries spread about deportation and anti-immigrant bias.
According
to the Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors extremism in the
United States, in the 10 days following the November 8 presidential
election there were 867 racist or xenophobic incidents nationwide.
Of the total, 280 — or 32 per cent — were motivated by anti-immigrant sentiment, the nonprofit organization reported last week.
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