Los Angeles Times

Images make border policy visible

A sobbing 2-year-old and similar scenes cut through the chatter to turn the abstract real.

- LORRAINE ALI TELEVISION CRITIC

For all the partisan panels and scream-fests that now pass as television news, all the dueling narratives across conspiracy-minded websites, all the social media accounts dedicated to pushing biased agendas no matter the truth or consequenc­es, it was the quiet cries of two distressed children, and the dialogue-free images of dozens more locked in cages, that broke through the noise.

There had been reports about the separation of undocument­ed immigrant families at the U.S.-Mexican border, children ripped from their parents and detained in undisclose­d centers as a result of President Trump’s “zero tolerance” immigratio­n policy. Since the White House announced the policy in early May, more than 2,300 children have been taken from their parents at the border. But those reports were lost among the billion or so other stories about Russian meddling and government dysfunctio­n, or is it the FBI and Hillary Clinton causing all the chaos?

Like everything that’s been leveraged for votes or ratings (school shootings, gender-neutral bathrooms, talk-show insults), the issues surroundin­g immigratio­n policy reform are often reduced to red state/blue state rallying cries. It’s part of the political theater that drives so much of our news media, and it’s held up as an affront to American values

by everyone from the altright and the radical left, from Fox and MSNBC to your conservati­ve and liberal relatives who haven’t talked since the fall of 2016.

The numbing cacaphony seemed impenetrab­le until we heard a leaked audio recording from a Texas detention center of a 6-year-old girl pleading with an adult male authority to see her mom.

And suddenly the nightly news was real and heartbreak­ing — video of children kept in cages that resembled dog kennels, sleeping on concrete floors under Mylar blankets — changing the destructiv­e cycle of divisive politics as usual.

Broadcast, streamed and posted on personal Facebook pages, the palpable images of terrified, isolated kids triggered an outcry against the “cruel” and “inhumane” policy, and it wasn’t only from Democrats, or even moderate Republican­s.

It was a pivotal moment that showed the power of television to change even some hardened minds — a moment when the tribal positions that have solidified since the election broke down.

The backlash came from parents, teens, Americans, human beings. Former first ladies, attorneys general, serving Senate and House leaders, conservati­ve church groups, liberal human rights groups were among those who voiced outrage and sadness. It was the children, not an army of pundits, who tapped a vein of shared empathy across a divided nation, and changed the course of a president whose MO is to never change course.

On Wednesday, bowing to pressure from all sides, including his own wife and daughter, Trump signed an executive order that that would allow families to be detained together. It’s still unclear how the new order will play out along the border, and what it means for the thousands of children already detained in undisclose­d locations. But it was something.

Perhaps Trump finally understood the widespread blowback toward those who insisted on treating the story like yet another opportunit­y to self-promote via bullying tactics and an insensitiv­ity that’s practicall­y become a personal brand.

Former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowsk­i was lambasted Tuesday by critics and colleagues after a Fox News segment in which he gave a mocking “Womp womp” response to a story about a 10-year-old girl with Down syndrome who was allegedly separated from her mom. Earlier in the week Laura Ingraham on the same network described the processing centers as “summer camps” for these kids.

Even policy wonks like MSNBC’s star host Rachel Maddow, who’s known for her deep dives into the thrilling details of things such as infrastruc­ture and Watergate-era legal procedure, was left without words by the end of her show Tuesday. While reading breaking news that the Associated Press had confirmed the government had “tender age” centers for babies and toddlers who were separated from their parents, she was unable to choke back tears and, with a few minutes left, threw her show to the next hour’s host, Lawrence O’Donnell.

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen on Tuesday was booed and heckled as she dined in Washington, D.C., at a Mexican restaurant, of all places. By Wednesday American Airlines announced it would not transport children under the “zero tolerance” policy. Governors of both political persuasion­s announced they would not send their National Guard troops to the border while the separation policy was in place.

The usual White House smoke-and-mirrors routine — blaming the Democrats, claiming he didn’t have the authority to stop separation­s (he did) — couldn’t distract from the reality captured by a photograph­er on the border:

A 2-year old Honduran girl sobs as her mother is patted down by a U.S. border patrol agent. In her tiny red sneakers, the toddler is barely taller than the tire on the agent’s truck. Bound for a processing center, the girl became the real face of the “zero tolerance” policy, thanks to a vigilant media and an American public who refused to look the other way.

No doubt we’ll go back to the ugly partisan fights that dominate the news cycles, and the president and the various tribes will call it a great victory. But for one moment, at least, televised humanity prevailed.

 ?? John Moore Getty Images ?? IN McALLEN, TEXAS, a 2-year-old Honduran sobs during a detention at the U.S.-Mexico border on June 12.
John Moore Getty Images IN McALLEN, TEXAS, a 2-year-old Honduran sobs during a detention at the U.S.-Mexico border on June 12.
 ?? YouTube/MSNBC ?? RACHEL MADDOW breaks down during Tuesday’s airing of her MSNBC show.
YouTube/MSNBC RACHEL MADDOW breaks down during Tuesday’s airing of her MSNBC show.

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