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This week, two comprehensive reports on the health of immigrant detainees were released by Human Rights Watch and the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center. As Public News Service reports, "Immigrants are, literally, dying for decent care."
There have been many cases of inadequate medical treatment or neglect leading to death in U.S. detention centers. The cases are horrific—ranging from an ignored broken spine to deadly metastasized genital cancer—and must stop immediately. But, a thorough accounting of the realities of detention is needed if the United States can engage in an honest dialogue about immigration policy.
RaceWire doesn't shrink from offering an incisive analysis in Health in Detention. Michelle Chen writes that "Part of the problem is that the mission of ICE’s Division of Immigration Health Services isn’t really to ensure that all detainees receive the care they need, but rather, to keep people essentially well enough to be kicked out of the country before they die." Chen adds that in some cases, that low bar isn't met.
There are many causes. After 9/11, the U.S. stopped aiming for a "more perfect union" of its diverse population. The Bush administration responded (starting in Florida) to the immigrant community with suspicion and force. And so it has continued, ultimately leading to the conditions outlined in this week's reports. The poor treatment of immigrants in U.S. custody reveals a very ugly side of the country, but it's hardly a new side. AlterNet's Lynn Tramonte offers a scathing indictment of how dangerous Agreement 287(g), which recruits local police to enforce immigration law, has become to communities.
The stalemate on immigration reform is sometimes portrayed as a disagreement over "safety" and "security" and "jobs." But, in many cases, it's a disguised resistance to the always-changing face of America. It's an old game of Tug-of-War. Wiretap reminds us how long this culture battle has been going on in the below video.
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