Shades of Nazi concentration camps
According to the Washington Post, the Trump regime plans to renovate industrial warehouses to hold more than 80,000 immigrant detainees at a time.The plan is for newly arrested detainees to be funneled —
let me remind you, with no due process, or independent magistrate or judge
checking on whether they are in fact in the United States illegally — into one
of seven large-scale warehouses holding 5,000 to 10,000 people each, where they
would be “staged” for deportation.
The large warehouses would be located close to major
logistics hubs in Virginia, Texas, Louisiana, Arizona, Georgia and Missouri.
Sixteen smaller warehouses would hold up to 1,500 people each.
America’s immigrant detention system is already the largest
in the world.
With the $45 billion Congress appropriated for locking up
immigrants, the regime has revived dormant prisons, repurposed sections of
military bases, and partnered with Republican governors to build immigrant tent
encampments in remote regions.
“We need to get better at treating this like a business,”
ICE acting director Todd M. Lyons said at a border security conference in
April, according
to the Arizona Mirror. The administration’s goal, he said, was to
deport immigrants as efficiently as Amazon moves packages: “Like Prime, but
with human beings.”
The logistical problems of converting warehouses into
detention camps are significant. Warehouses are designed for storage and
shipping of things, not people. They are often poorly ventilated and without
precise temperature controls, and they lack access to the plumbing and
sanitation systems needed to support thousands of full-time residents.
Beyond logistics is the dehumanization.
Ninety-three years ago, in March 1933, the Nazis established
their first concentration camp in what is now Dachau, Poland. Other camps were
soon established in Buchenwald and Sachsenhausen.
Initially, the Nazi’s put into these camps Communists,
Social Democrats, trade unionists, and others deemed a threat to the Nazi
regime.
After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9-10, 1938,
approximately 30,000 Jewish men were arrested and sent to these camps in a
mass, large-scale action that targeted them for being Jewish. The systematic
mass murder of Jews in camps designed as extermination camps did not begin
until late 1941 and early 1942, as part of the “Final Solution.”
The U.S. began forcibly moving Japanese Americans into America’s own camps in early 1942, following President Roosevelt's signing of Executive Order 9066 of February 19, 1942, which authorized military exclusion zones. Initial roundups of Japanese Americans, deemed "enemy aliens," started immediately after Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor attack on December 7, 1941.
Around 120,000 people of Japanese descent, mostly U.S.
citizens from the West Coast, were incarcerated in ten camps in remote inland
states and temporary Assembly Centers. Hundreds more were imprisoned in Hawaii.
Once dehumanization begins, it’s hard to end.
As I noted, ICE is arresting, imprisoning, and deporting
people it accuses of being in the United States illegally — but there is no due
process, no third-party validation of ICE’s accusations.
ICE now holds more than 68,000 people in detention
facilities, according to agency data. Nearly half — 48 percent — have no
criminal convictions or pending criminal charges, ICE data shows.
ICE’s biggest current facility is a tent encampment at the
Fort Bliss U.S. Army base in Texas, which now holds around 3,000 people but was
expected to have a capacity of 5,000 by year’s end.
The largest proposed ICE warehouse would hold up to 10,000
detainees in Stafford, Virginia. Another with capacity for up to 9,500 is
planned for Hutchins, near Dallas. A third, with space for 9,000, in Hammond,
east of Baton Rouge.
There is no place in a civilized society for the warehousing
of people.
There is no justification in a society putatively organized
under the rule of law to imprison people without due process.
There is no decency in removing hardworking members of our
communities from their families and neighbors and imprisoning them and then
deporting them to other countries, some of which are brutal dictatorships.
When the history of this cruel era is written, the shame
should be no less than the shame we now feel about the roundups and detention
of Japanese Americans in World War II.
Hopefully, the dehumanization of the people that the Trump
regime aims to warehouse will not result in the sadistic cruelties of the
Nazi’s starting ninety-three years ago.
