Trump’s Immigration Policy Is Designed to Stoke Crisis

Without a perceived crisis at the border, there’s no pretext for ICE raids, family separation, and concentration camps

Peter Tinti
GEN

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Shoes are left by people at the Tornillo Port of Entry near El Paso, Texas, June 21, 2018 during a protest rally by several American mayors against the US administration’s family separation policy. Photo: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

TThe most inhumane aspects of our current immigration system — concentration camps, ICE raids, family separation, and indefinite detention — are all by design.

We know this because the architects of this system have been telling us for the better part of two decades. As far back as 2003, President George W. Bush’s attorney general, John Ashcraft, advocated for immigrant detention in order to send “a message of deterrence to other Central American individuals who may be considering immigration.” In 2015, the Obama administration used the same deterrence argument to justify the detention of migrant children.

When current government officials say that child separation is designed, in part, to disincentivize mothers from migrating with their children, they are being forthright. When then Department of Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly said in 2017 that the “big name of the game is deterrence,” he was being sincere. More recently, even as interim DHS chief Kevin McAleenan told NBC News that family separation was “not worth it,” top administration officials expressed a preference for continuing family…

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