Putting traumatized immigrant children out of sight

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Jim Hightower's Radio Lowdown
Putting traumatized immigrant children out of sight
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In June, our immigrant-bashing president ordered an end to his own warped policy of forcibly tearing terrified migrant children from the arms of their asylum-seeking parents. Trump declared “I didn’t like the sight or the feeling of families being separated.”

Yeah… “bad optics,” as PR consultants call scenes of such thuggishness. So he – and we – no longer have to witness nightly TV coverage of shrieking toddlers being taken from their parents and hauled off to federal warehouses. But wait – out-of-sight doesn’t mean the depravity has ended. Some 500 of the 2,900 children who were snatched last spring are still in government custody, scared that they’ll never see their parents again and traumatized by the uncertainty of what’ll happen to them.

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Worse, more refugee children are being incarcerated every day as they seek asylum from the horrors of rapacious gang wars and abject poverty in their Central American homelands. More than 12,000 migrant children are now out-of-sight and out-of-mind in our government’s warehouses, military bases, and sprawling “tent cities.” And Trump is requesting money to lock up another 20,000 children .

All this trauma and cost is the result of the Trumpeteers’ inhumane and failed “zero-tolerance” policy of jailing children – even babies – in hopes of scaring other refugees from seeking asylum in our Land of Opportunity. They created this humanitarian crisis, and rather than ending it by rushing in hundreds of lawyers and judges to process the asylum requests, Trump and his rabidly anti-immigrant ideologues are taxing us by building more jails for refugees, while also openly violating the law that says immigrant children can’t be locked up for more than 20 days.

For more about Trump’s sick and sickening policy, contact Kids in Need of Defense: www.SupportKind.org.

The Family Separation Crisis Goes On,” The New York Times, August 31, 2018.

Feds to expand shelter for undocumented kids,” Austin American Statesman, September 12, 2018.

“Families could be detained longer,” Austin American Statesman, September 7, 2018.

Parents facing tougher rules for getting migrant kids back,” Austin American Statesman, September 23, 2018.

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