Tag Archives: ICE abuses

“So this is Christmas.

And what have you done?”

John Lennon’s lyrics come to mind every year at this time forcing a review of a year fast to be in the rear-view mirror. So much of 2025 has involved a total reorientation. The November election of 2024 sent me into a tailspin causing the scrapping of every single plan I had envisioned. But that happened to many of us, and I suspect a good lot of us are still trying to figure out where our lives are heading. Fast change with no time to adjust has become normal. We grab a headline here and there, try to grasp its significance, only to realize we missed something even bigger. About the time we’ve gotten hold of the new reality of yesterday’s events (or was that last week??), something else drops and we’re left struggling with those ramifications. The ground is never solid and the landscape never clear, still the clock ticks and the days move forward.

My reorientation this year pulled me into the world of activism. Protests, letter writing, research, networking, putting myself out there in ways that feel unfamiliar, and yet somehow undeniably right. Learning how to letter posters has never come in handier. Thank you, Mrs. Mattice from HS Art! I have a huge collection of signs from various protest events I attended this year.

The homeowners’ association weighed in on just one protest effort this week. It concerns the photo at the top of this blog. That five-by-five-foot banner hung over the third bay garage space drew a demand for removal. Apparently a disgruntled MAGA neighbor made a complaint. I’m glad it irritated someone because that means it’s getting noticed. That’s the point of protest. To push back, to challenge, to bring the unsaid into the world, ultimately to produce change.

A few of those unsaid (or not said enough) things:

Being undocumented is a civil offense not a criminal one. (MAGA just can’t get this in their heads!!)

The Trump administration is building a mass deportation system of historic proportions. Henchman Stephen Miller has masterminded this well-funded, racially motivated program to make America white again. To do this, ICE has become a lawless, battle-ready band of untrained thugs.

There are currently over 68,000 people in ICE detention (as of mid-Dec 2025, Guardian report). The administration has arrested more than 328,000 and deported nearly 327,000.

And Trump continues to lie about deporting “the worst of the worst.” Most of those detained have no criminal record. Of the 25% with a criminal charge, most involve minor offenses like traffic violations. In fact, there just aren’t enough criminals to round up to make Stephen Miller’s quotas. Therefore, ICE hits the streets going after anybody who happens to appear other than white, or speak a language other than English.

To facilitate mass deportation, and house record numbers of detainees, the administration is eyeing buying warehouses and fitting them out with makeshift shelter structures. Detention facilities have been the subject of many reports of human rights abuses including lack of edible food, potable water, overcrowding, lack of sanitation and lack of medical care. Already this year there have been 30 deaths in ICE detention, the single deadliest year in decades.

There’s a link at the bottom for an article that gives a good overview on where things stand. There’s no doubt I’ll be working on these issues in 2026. It’s my hope that sometime over the holidays, you’ll pause to think about those in detention. Think about those around you who are vulnerable or who have been made vulnerable by the actions of MAGA and this president. Consider ways you might be able to intercede. 2026 will continue to challenge us in ever more persistent and direct ways. I implore you to not shrink from responsibility but to shoulder it bravely and boldly.

“So this is Christmas. And what have you done?”

https://www.migrationpolicy.org/article/trump-immigrant-detention

MY BOOKS:

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Is ICE Coming to Your Town?

In mid-August the Washington Post broke an important story about Stephen Miller ramping up his mass deportation scheme. All over the country, ICE is eyeing defunct prisons and slowly re-opening some of them. Some communities have tried to fight these re-openings. Some see dollar signs and roll-over, often thinking they have no grounds to stop the feds making contracts with private companies like GEO and Core-Civic.

ICE’s new plan will double detention capacity to over 100,000 people and spread detention centers into new areas of the country. Fueled by the $45 Billion from the Big Beautiful Bill, ICE will hire 10,000 new employees and expand existing and soft-sided detention centers (like Alligator Alcatraz). Of special note is the impending growth in family detention facilities that the administration has said is its preferred method of deporting families. Apparently, we should expect to see a lot more of this in 2026 and onward.

In Colorado, ICE seems to be planning to open up to three new sites: Walsenburg, Hudson, and Ignacio. Reporting from Walsenburg indicates that their mayor is all in for ICE to come to town. He expects an economic boom. The problem is that there’s a body of research that suggests that prisons don’t actually lead to economic growth. The research indicates that employment growth doesn’t happen. Towns with prisons have lower retail sales, lower wages, and slower housing growth compared to towns without prisons. Property values decline near the prison with a shift to lower income households. Any jobs the prison might bring in generally go to senior people already in the system (or company). People in these small rural towns where ICE wants to re-open a defunct prison often don’t have the skillsets required to be hired. One study showed that prison employees commuted twice as far as other workers indicating prison workers often don’t reside in the communities where the prison is located.

And those wonderful economic benefits that are sure to flow back into a community with a prison? They just don’t materialize. A prison (or ICE detention facility) operates as a unique business model, a self-sustaining entity that takes care of its own food, laundry, maintenance, security, transportation, etc. It doesn’t link into the community to buy things or stimulate local businesses the way any other kind of operation might. In addition, prison or detainee labor can compete and crowd out local competition for services in the community.

And then there are the costs that local taxpayers would be required to bear to have the “privilege” of being stigmatized with having a morally repugnant entity in town. It’s a shame that so many towns have already had ICE reactivate these centers. More are scheduled to open unless something changes and changes fast.

For more:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2miN1ltrOUc&t=18s

ICE documents reveal plans to double immigrant detention space by 2026 – The Washington Post  Washington Post, 15 Aug 2025, “ICE Documents Reveal Plans to Double Immigration Detention Space by 2026” by Douglas MacMillanN. Kirkpatrick, and Lydia Sidhom

So You Think a New Prison Will Save Your Town? | The Marshall Project The Marshall Report, 6-14-2016, Tom Meagher & Christie Thompson

ACLU: Private Prisons and Mass Incarceration (Nov 2, 2011) bankingonbondage_web.pdf  p. 20-22: Scant Economic Benefit for Local Communities

Revisiting the Impact of Prison Building on Job Growth: Education, Incarceration, and County‐Level Employment, 1976–2004* – Hooks – 2010 – Social Science Quarterly – Wiley Online Library

The Local Economic Impacts of Prisons | The Review of Economics and Statistics | MIT Press  Nov 7, 2024, The Review of Economics and Statistics (2024) 106 (6): 1442–1459.

The Development of Last Resort: The Impact of New State Prisons on Small Town Economies, Terry L. Besser and Margaret M. Hanson, Iowa State University (paper under review at the Journal of the Community Development Society) Microsoft Word – Besser Hanson CDS 04.doc

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One Million Rising

One Million Rising: Session 1

Please devote 90 minutes to this important training session to understand how authoritarianism works and view a plan to counter it together.

So many have asked, “What can I do?” Here’s the answer!

From the YouTube Channel:

“Join us for the first One Million Rising coordinating call and training! Get oriented to making meaning of this moment and the role you can play in coordinated strategic action. This 3-part training will equip you with a coordinated national strategy to organize locally, host community gatherings, and build a force bigger than fear. Sign up, show up, and take action together. Access your Community Resistance Gathering Host Toolkit here – it has everything you’ll need to host a gathering!” https://docs.google.com/document/d/18… Make sure you’re signed up for our last two sessions in the One Million Rising series – we’ll cover everything else you need to know then! https://www.mobilize.us/nokings/event… Take the pledge to host a community resistance gathering! https://www.nokings.org/rise

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