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EXCLUSIVE ON FOX: A professor from a Kansas community college has come under scrutiny for endorsing the exposure of ICE agents’ identities and advocating citizen intervention in their duties, according to a review of his social media activity.
Steve Werkmeister, an English professor at Johnson County Community College located in Overland Park, Kansas, uses the pseudonym Steve W on Bluesky—a social media platform known for its left-leaning user base. His profile, found at swerkmeister.bsky.social, describes him as a “slacker” with political views “left of the dial.”
Recently, Werkmeister shared a flyer from a progressive advocacy group that instructs activists on how to disrupt ICE operations using whistles. The flyer suggests that blowing whistles when ICE officials are spotted helps people “track ICE convoys,” “alert neighbors to join the effort,” and “keep pace with the group.”

Additionally, Werkmeister reposted a message from John Pavlovitz, a prominent far-left digital activist, which urges individuals to reveal family members employed by ICE.
He also shared a post by John Pavlovitz, a known far-left internet activist, encouraging family members to “out” relatives who work for ICE.
“Good people need to start outing their ICE family members, neighbors, and community members,” the post says. “They need to be made into pariahs in the places decent Americans gather.”
On multiple occasions, Werkmeister refers to federal immigration enforcement as “kidnapping,” and appears paranoid that he and his family will be “kidnapped” by ICE because of their “brown” skin. He said he communicated to the Johnson County Community College staff his desire to teach online from overseas.
“I’ve talked to our chair and the college president to see if I can just move online and teach from a safe location overseas (my family and I can be kidnapped by the government at any time since our skin is brown), and so far they’re compassionately noncommittal (lots of empty phrases),” he said in an Oct. 10 post.Â
A Rutgers University professor, Mark Bray, nicknamed “Dr. Antifa,” fled to Spain last week after President Donald Trump labeled Antifa a domestic terrorist organization.Â
After an apparent trip overseas, Werkmeister explained his protocol for re-entering the United States.Â

A photo of the Johnson County Community College campus taken on an unknown date. (Johnson County Community College)
“Even though our citizenship is beyond question in any normal, legal sense, we’re brown, so I texted my family as soon as we landed and told them I’d text again once we got past customs. If they didn’t get the second text, they’d know we were detained and needed lawyers right away,” he posted in March.
“Then once we were safely at the gate, I realized my anxiety over the culture of violence and predatory aggression in this country had returned,” he said in a follow-up post. “I never once felt threatened abroad. It’s a national shame that the most dangerous part of our trip was coming home to our own country.”
Some of Werkmeister’s ire specifically targets White people.Â
“It’s tough to live with the knowledge that whenever I go to the store, or to my office, or out for a walk, or anywhere really, packs of white ‘Americans’ are out hunting and kidnapping people who look like me,” he said in a June 26 post. “It’s psychological terrorism for the crime of being born brown in America.”
In an earlier post, he claimed that White people want “brown folks back to the fields.”

Supporters of Sen. Ted Cruz, who was running for president, wait outside Yardley Hall at Johnson County Community College on March 2, 2016, in Overland Park, Kansas. (Kyle Rivas/Getty Images)
“Mediocre white males realized they can’t compete on a more level playing field, so they need to force women back into the kitchen and black and brown folks back to the fields. They’ve had others carry them for 500 years, and they can’t ‘win’ without white privilege.”
“JCCC is an open dialog institution, and the values of Johnson County Community College is something we hold true for all,” a school spokesman told Fox News Digital in a brief statement.Â
Werkmeister did not return a request for comment.