Trump brutality against children rivals his first term
Rachel Rutter for Common Dreams
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| (Photo by Charly Triballeau/ AFP via Getty Images) |
“Ms. Rachel, can ICE take me?”
“What about my dad? Can they take my dad away?”
“I feel so angry about how ICE is grabbing people out of my
neighborhood.”
“I feel traumatized ever since ICE stole my sister.”
“I’m afraid to walk to school. I’m afraid to leave my
house.”
“I want my mom back.”
These are real questions and comments I’ve heard from the kids I work with at Project Libertad in recent days, as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) terrorizes their communities daily. While newcomers have always faced higher rates of anxiety, depression, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and other mental health challenges than their US-born peers, the divide is becoming more apparent each day.
These conversations with
my kids represent a stark increase in fear and anxiety among immigrant
children—and it’s not just an anecdotal shift. The data are clear: The Trump
administration’s increasingly hostile immigration policies are irreversibly
harming children.
Pediatricians Susan Kressly and Michelle Barnes warn of the lifelong impact these policies have on
children’s development and health into adulthood:
Witnessing harm to others and living in constant fear is traumatic to all children in the community. These stressors disrupt brain development and have long-term negative effects on the health and well-being of impacted children. Ultimately, the cumulative effects make these communities less healthy.




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