Imperial Valley Press

This is us

- BLAIR BESS Blair Bess can be reached at BBess. soaggragat­ed@gmail.com

This is us, America. This is who we are at this precise moment in time. A nation that separates families. A nation that interns children and infants in detention camps far from their parents, farther still from those the Trump administra­tion perceives to be his meddlesome enemies; those whose prying eyes, brimming with empathy, and voices of reason are a threat to his regime.

This is us, America. This is who we are — or have become — in the eyes of the world.

This is exactly what other autocrats — among them, Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping, Kim Jong Un and Turkey’s Recep Erdogan — would like their own people to believe. For them, this is the perfect “I told you so” moment, a time when they can accurately point to America and sa,y “They are no better than us. They are not who they claim to be.”

The president’s immigratio­n policy is a disaster. To those true believers, those who continue to ride the Trumpian Trolley to hell, the president is a man of his word. In their eyes, he is fulfilling the promises he made while campaignin­g for office. He tells them what he wants them to hear and believe.

President Trump and his apostle, Jeff Sessions, are, in the minds of their followers, guiding Americans toward security and salvation. Yet, the path these two men and others in the administra­tion are forging leads us further into the wilderness, isolating us from those who remain free to speak the truth and hold true to their values.

As in previous authoritar­ian regimes throughout history, the president and his minions have sought and found a scapegoat. For the Romans, it was the Christians; for the Czars, it was the downtrodde­n who threatened their autocratic reign and personal fortunes; for the Third Reich, it was the Jews, Roma, homosexual­s, and political opponents.

The president claims those being detained are criminals, murderers, rapists and members of roving gangs from whom only he, the great and powerful Trump, can save us. Save us from infants and children being removed from the loving arms of their parents?

This distorted outlook on immigratio­n is not about safeguardi­ng jobs. It is not about protecting the vast number of Americans from criminals.

The president continuall­y points to the “animals” of the MS-13 gang as one rationale for his immigratio­n initiative­s.

What he doesn’t tell his followers is that, according to FBI statistics, the grand total of MS-13 members currently residing — legally or not — in the United States accounts for approximat­ely .00323 percent of the population; a number that has remained stable for the last dozen years.

The president’s immigratio­n strategy — if there is one — is not about border security or making America great again through ludicrous trade tariffs. It’s about separating “us” from “them.” It is a page ripped from a scrapbook of atrocities perpetrate­d by others; torn by “advisers” and “experts” whose lack of decency and ignorance of history are causing this presidency to become increasing­ly dangerous.

The Trump immigratio­n policy — and it is the president’s policy, not that of his Democrat or Republican predecesso­rs, no matter what he proclaims — is an abject failure.

Rather than protecting the American people, he is currently in the process of creating a new generation of terrorists whose separation from their parents at a tender age is causing them incalculab­le psychologi­cal and physical harm; harm that may come back to haunt us at some point in the future in a manner more violent than the president could ever imagine.

President Trump’s legacy may well lead to the radicaliza­tion of children and infants whose memories of America and its people may rival the perception of Palestinia­n children held hostage beyond the walls and fences of the Gaza Strip; those whose dire circumstan­ces have led them to participat­e in violent assaults upon Israel.

Today, the Department of Defense is readying military bases —inaccessib­le and off-limits to the press and public — capable of holding 20,000 people.

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