Well,
it was a hell of a State of the Union speech [on February 7]. Throughout it, multiple
Republicans rudely interrupted the president by shouting, “Secure the border!”
It’s important to remember
what happened when Republicans were in charge of securing the border: their “big
new idea” was to forcibly separate children from their parents and put
bewildered and terrified youngsters in cages for the world to see.
And
then they trafficked and disposed of those children, as if dumping the trash,
in a way that “lost” thousands of them.
Last
week the Biden administration announced that, so far, they’ve managed to
reunite 2,926 of the 3,924 children brutally torn from their families by Donald
Trump’s and Stephen Miller’s cruel and criminal border policy. Biden’s Task
Force on the Reunification of Families believes 998 children
are still missing, trafficked by the Trump administration to places and people
unknown.
Josef
Stalin is often quoted (perhaps apocryphally) as saying, “A single
death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic.”
Our media treated these
children as if they were a statistic rather than as individuals: that DHS Task
Force announcement last week was a minor, one-day story.
Louise
and I have three children. I can’t even begin to imagine — it’s too traumatic
to really let myself fully go there — what it would feel like or how I’d
respond if a Trump official had taken one of our three children away from us by
force and we now had no idea where she was.
Can
you?
Can America summon enough
empathy to feel the pain a nursing mother felt when her child was torn from her
breast and handed off to one of Trump’s and Betsy DeVos’ “Christian adoption”
groups, or to be trafficked into God-knows-where in the US, vanished without a
trace?
Each
one of these children — both those reunited (after four years!) and those still
missing — are scarred for life.
This is child abuse of
unimaginable scope and cruelty.
The
nonprofit group Physicians for Human Rights was given access
to a group of asylum seekers and their children who had been ripped apart by
Trump’s agents at the border. Their findings, while predictable, are
nonetheless shocking.
First, they noted, all of the parents
and children who’d arrived at our southern border were already traumatized by the
events that led them to flee their homes and the rigors of the hundreds of
miles they’d traveled to get here.
“Due
to targeted acts of violence in their home countries,” PHR notes, “all parents
arrived at the U.S. border having already been exposed to trauma — most often
as victims of gang activity — from death threats, physical assault, relatives
killed, extortion, sexual assault, or robbery. All parents expressed fear that
their child would be harmed or killed if they stayed in their home country.
“In almost all cases, their children had already faced severe
harm before fleeing — gangs drugged, kidnapped, poisoned, and threatened
children, including threats of death, violence, or kidnapping, if they or their
parents did not comply with the gang’s demands.
“Parents were confident that the journey to the United States
would result in protection for their children.”
But protection was not what
they found when they met Trump’s agents at the border. Instead, they confronted
the unimaginable horror of being torn from their children, in most cases as
soon as they’d applied for asylum:
“When they arrived in the United States, however, parents
reported that immigration authorities forcibly removed children from their
parents’ arms, removed parents while their children slept, or simply
‘disappeared’ the children while their parents were in court rooms or receiving
medical care.
“Almost all reported that immigration authorities failed to
provide any explanation as to why they were being separated, where their family
members were being sent, and if or how they would be reunited. In addition, the
asylum narratives documented instances of four parents who were taunted and
mocked by immigration authorities when asking for the whereabouts of their
children.”
The
shock these parents and their children felt was deep and long lasting.
Something most of us will never have the misfortune to experience.
Imagine if a gang in your
neighborhood threatened to kill your child or force her into prostitution, so
you gathered up your most important possessions — no more than you could carry
in a backpack — and walked from your home with your child for days and nights,
braving robbers and rapists, to reach a nearby state.
And,
once there, hoping for asylum and safety, a new gang — this time in uniform —
took your child from you and explicitly told you you’d never see him or her
again?
Can you imagine any worse
trauma? I’d rather get a terminal cancer diagnosis than be told my child has
been stolen and I’ll never see him again. I don’t think I’d ever recover.
As
Physicians for Human Rights noted:
“PHR clinicians chronicled that nearly everyone interviewed
exhibited symptoms and behaviors consistent with trauma and its effects:
being confused and upset, constantly worried, crying a lot, having sleeping
difficulties, not eating well, having nightmares, being preoccupied, having
severely depressed moods, overwhelming symptoms of anxiety, and physiological
manifestations of panic and despair (racing heart, shortness of breath, and
headaches), feeling ‘pure agony’ and hopelessness, feeling emotional and mental
anguish, and being ‘incredibly despondent.’
“The evaluating clinicians noted that the children exhibited
reactions that included regression in age-appropriate behaviors, crying, not
eating, having nightmares and other sleeping difficulties, loss of
developmental milestones, as well as clinging to parents and feeling scared
following reunification with their parents.”
This crime was perpetrated in
our names, yours and mine. We paid for it with our tax dollars.
In 1984 nations around the
world ratified the United Nations Convention Against
Torture. As PHR notes, it specifies that criminal torture:
“[I]s an act 1) which causes severe physical or mental suffering,
2) done intentionally, 3) for the purpose of coercion, punishment,
intimidation, or for a discriminatory reason, 4) by a state official or with
state consent or acquiescence.”
Inflicting
torture to intimidate and punish refugees for seeking asylum is a crime under
international law. A serious crime.
And this crime was no
accident. In early May, 2018, Stephen Miller called together a group of senior
Trump administration officials in the White House to demand they get with the
so-called “zero tolerance” program Donald Trump and Attorney General Jeff
Sessions had announced nearly a month earlier.
Using
torture to discourage people from showing up at the border was an extreme
measure, Miller knew, but too many Brown people were entering our
majority-White country. As two attendees at the meeting told NBC
reporters Julia Ainsley and Jacob Soboroff, Stephen Miller said it right out
loud:
“If we don't enforce this, it is the end of our country as we
know it.”
The
meeting calendar says attendees included AG Jeff Sessions, DHS head Kirstjen
Nielsen, professional bigot Stephen Miller, CIA Director Mike Pompeo, HHS head
Alex Azar, Undersecretary of Defense John Rood, Trump’s Chief of Staff John
Kelly, deputy chief of staff Chris Liddell, White House counsel Don McGahn, and
Legislative Affairs Director Marc Short.
After
Miller’s pitch he demanded a show of hands for the president’s brutal and
criminal policy; according to media reports, only Kirstjen Nielsen refused to
raise hers (but later defended the policy, which she helped implement).
They were all in on the
crime. They all followed through with the crime. They should all be facing a
prosecutor and a jury of their peers.
And
it’s not just a crime by international standards. Section 2340A of
Title 18, US Code, prohibits torture committed by American public
officials under color of law against persons within the official’s custody or
control.
That federal law defines
torture as “acts specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental
pain or suffering.”
Three
former Trump officials told NBC’s
reporters that Miller was even arguing for routinely separating virtually
all asylum seekers and brown-skinned southern-border
immigrants from their children, “even those going through civil court
proceedings.”
This
isn’t the first time America has officially visited brutality on non-white
people as a matter of policy. The people who committed the horrific acts of
slavery, the slaughter of Native Americans, ran a century of
“separate-but-equal,” and interned Japanese-Americans in the 1940s are all
dead.
But this time we have an opportunity to make right a crime
committed in the immediate past while all the co-conspirators and perpetrators
are still alive.
Will
Merrick Garland show the same reluctance to prosecute these Trump
administration crimes as he’s shown so far regarding the plotters and planners
of January 6th?
Will other federal prosecutors also fail to seek justice for these children and
families?
Or will justice finally be
served, so future administrations will think long and hard before again using
torture as a policy tool?
If
you’d like to share your opinion with your elected representatives, the number
for the Congressional switchboard is 202-224-3121. And don’t forget to reach
out to your favorite media outlets via social media and ask why they’re not
covering this crime more comprehensively.
Thom Hartmann is a NY Times bestselling author
34 books in 17 languages & nation's #1 progressive radio host.
Psychotherapist, international relief worker. Politics, history, spirituality,
psychology, science, anthropology, pre-history, culture, and the natural world
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