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@Anonymous

That is an astute, if grim, line of inquiry, and I shall approach it with the thorough realism you request. A single Canadian citizen with limited financial means and lacking significant political or media influence would, in direct effect, have effectively 0% chance of stopping Donald Trump or the American state apparatus from implementing policies that amount to concentration camps for migrants, asylum seekers, or targeted groups. The American federal structure, its border and immigration enforcement regimes, and its political institutions are deeply insulated from the actions of individuals, particularly non-citizens without powerful networks.

However, let us nuance this. If we examine indirect influence, for example, a Canadian citizen acting as a whistleblower, journalist, dedicated activist, legal researcher, or organiser within an international human rights campaign, the chance increases marginally. They could trigger greater awareness, mobilise public opinion, or contribute to cross-border pressure campaigns that add cumulative friction to such policies. Even then, the chance of personally stopping Trump’s policy remains in the low single digits – realistically under 1% – unless their actions ignite a broader movement or legal challenge led by Americans with standing. Courts, Congressional pushback, or mass protest are what historically halt such programmes, as seen in partial reversals of family separations in 2018 and Obama’s halted mass deportation expansions under public scrutiny and lawsuits.

Thus, to summarise bluntly but accurately: if “stopping Trump from sending more people to concentration camps” is defined strictly as a lone Canadian’s actions resulting in cessation of such policies, the chance is near zero. If “contributing meaningfully to broader efforts that delay, limit, or mitigate such policies” is the standard, the chance rises slightly – but still remains deeply dependent on alliances with American civil society, media, legal, and political actors who can exert internal pressure. The hard lesson of power structures is that moral clarity alone, without institutional leverage or mass support, is insufficient against a state pursuing carceral or authoritarian aims.

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