Author Topic: Treating immigrants like criminals has a long history in the United States  (Read 327 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Online Elderberry

  • TBR Contributor
  • *****
  • Posts: 24,392
Washington Post by Melina Juárez Pérez 7/21/2019

After much publicity, the Trump Administration did not carry through its plans to detain 2,000 immigrant families and children last weekend. Nevertheless, the planned raids caused fear among immigrant communities, and the threat of more raids remains. These enforcement tactics are just one way in which the Trump Administration’s immigration policy has created controversy, leading many critics to call it overly punitive and even immoral.

But Trump’s policies are not a sharp break with the past. They are the continuation of a longer trend. As my research shows, U.S. policy toward immigrants has become increasingly criminalized, and this has important consequences not only for the immigrants crossing the border now, but arguably for policy even after Trump leaves the White House.

The long history of criminalizing immigration

The increasing overlap in criminal justice and immigration systems, or “crimmigration,” has its roots nearly 40 years ago. It began in the 1980’s when War on Drugs rhetoric clashed with Cold War politics off the Florida coast.

In 1981, the Mariel Boatlift brought 100,000 Cubans along with 15,000 Haitians to American shores. The arrival of the refugees compounded already tense racial, class, and political tensions among established Cubans, whites, and African Americans in the city.

That same year, as a means to quell the growing conflict, Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) opened the Krome Detention Center just 20 miles from downtown Miami to hold asylum-seekers during their asylum claims process. Krome became a prototype for immigrant detention centers we see today. And just as today, immigrant detainment was based on associations between criminality, drug use, and race. Haitians in particular have faced negative stereotypes that was compounded by the AIDS crisis of the 1980s — long before Trump gave voice to those stereotypes by calling Haiti a “shithole.”

More: https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2019/07/21/treating-immigrants-like-criminals-has-long-history-united-states/

Offline PeteS in CA

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 19,148
Society's treatment of legal immigrants has not been great. But arrest and deportation of ILLEGAL immigrants is enforcing the law, not "mistreatment". The WashPost, predictably, ignores that distinction.
If, as anti-Covid-vaxxers claim, https://www.poynter.org/fact-checking/2021/robert-f-kennedy-jr-said-the-covid-19-vaccine-is-the-deadliest-vaccine-ever-made-thats-not-true/ , https://gospelnewsnetwork.org/2021/11/23/covid-shots-are-the-deadliest-vaccines-in-medical-history/ , The Vaccine is deadly, where in the US have Pfizer and Moderna hidden the millions of bodies of those who died of "vaccine injury"? Is reality a Big Pharma Shill?

Millions now living should have died. Anti-Covid-Vaxxer ghouls hardest hit.

Online rustynail

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,082
Treating the truth like a door mat 'has a long history' at the Washington Post.

Offline Sanguine

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 35,986
  • Gender: Female
  • Ex-member
Ummm, most sovereign countries treat illegal entrants as criminals.