With so
much misinformation circulating about the nature of immigration, there needs to
be some clarifications made between the issue of being in the U.S. without
documentation, i.e. being undocumented, which is not a criminal offense but a
civil issue, verses being caught entering the country illegally, which is a
felony. The former case is the situation for the overwhelming majority of those
in the country who are undocumented. Most enter the U.S. legally and overstay
their time allotted to remain in the U.S. For the latter case, law enforcement must
capture the person/s entering and must testify for these cases to be
prosecuted.
The
injustice in the immigrant detention system is the use of mandatory detention
for all undocumented cases. There is no reason to detain anyone for a pending
immigration case that is in nature a civil issue. Mandatory detention has been
going on since the late ‘80s, was massively expanded under a law known as
IIRAIRA, a Clinton law, and is what has led to these injustices (Detention Watch Network). This is why Trump says this is a democrat law. He fails to mention that separating children
from families is not required in the law. Mandatory detention is the problem
here. It is unnecessary, and draconian. Mandatory detention should only occur
for actual criminal offenses, not for a lack of paperwork and it should never
be mandatory.
The
for-profit prison industry is behind this entire boondoggle. This is the
absolute worst case of government waste the U.S. has ever engaged in. It is
corporate welfare at its most exploitative. It is exploitative of immigrants,
based on a minor offense similar to a misdemeanor, and it is exploitative of
the U.S. taxpayer.
The remedy for these injustices, frankly, is to open the border (Call For Open Borders).
If we call for free markets, then this must include the free movement of labor.
Let the economic forces police the labor market. It will equalize, the costs of
doing business will go down, and Mexican workers will no longer be at a
competitive disadvantage that exploits their labor.
Mexican workers
are exploited at every turn, whether it is through poor labor, poor pay, no
benefits, and no recourse should they become injured, or by the system that
detains them taking advantage of their undocumented status. Again, keep in
mind that being undocumented is not a criminal offense and one for which
mandatory detention is inappropriate.
Trump’s
call for the detention of children with families is no different from the
internment of Japanese families during WWII. These immigration policies that underwrite
the private-prison industry take advantage of American racism and xenophobia
for the sake of profit. This immigration-industrial complex is designed for no
more than profiteering from the suffering of desperate people.
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