In the waning days of the Obama administration, the Department of Homeland     Security announced the recipients of $10 million worth of grants through     its flagship counterterrorism initiative vaguely monikered “Countering     Violent Extremism” (CVE). These were mostly law enforcement and community     organizations, including two local groups, the Illinois Criminal Justice     Information Authority (or ICJIA, a state agency that creates policy and     researches ways to make the state justice system more efficient) and Life     After Hate (a nonprofit that works to “off-ramp” people from white     supremacist and other extremist movements).



  After Trump’s inauguration, his DHS appointees—including national security     analyst and Breitbart contributor              Katharine Gorka, known for her              Islamophobic rhetoric—reevaluated the groups who were awarded these funds and rolled out a    revised list of grantees in May     of 2017. Life After Hate, which was supposed to get $400,000, was taken off     the list. The ICJIA, however, remained, with a nearly $200,000 grant. Soon     after the announcement, WTTW              reported          that some of the community organizations ICJIA listed as “partners” on     their application never agreed to work with the agency.



  Even before the 9/11 attacks birthed the Patriot Act, the federal     government was already conducting              mass surveillance in the Arab American neighborhoods of Bridgeview          under the code name “Operation Vulgar Betrayal,” recently chronicled in the     documentary film              The Feeling of Being Watched. And long before that, the feds used              COINTELPRO to spy on black and Latino political organizations          under the guise of national security concerns. AAAN and other community     groups are skeptical that a program connected with law enforcement     or the national security apparatus could do anything but undermine     community trust, especially among youth.



  Nguyen isn’t alone in her analysis. Academics and former federal     law enforcement workers at New York University’s Brennan Center for Justice     have been              sounding the alarm          about CVE              since its inception, drawing attention to the fact that the scientific underpinnings of the     “radicalization” theory have been debunked by empirical research and that     it’s impossible to predict when and why someone becomes violent.



  “Where is the scientific evidence that we need more data collection [on     youth], that we need more counterterrorism programs?” Sankari asks, “as     opposed to what we believe all young people need: more investment in     education, more investment in comprehensive health services including     mental health services. Let’s talk about raising the standard of living of     young people before we talk about them allegedly wanting to join violent     organizations.”