The Bakersfield Californian

Shut the American gulag, issue a presidenti­al pardon, uphold universal asylum rights

- GONZALO SANTOS Gonzalo Santos, Ph.D., is professor emeritus of sociology at Cal State Bakersfiel­d. A rally outside the Mesa Verde ICE-GEO Group facility in Bakersfiel­d will be held at noon today.

On Feb. 17, 77 individual­s detained at the Mesa Verde ICE Processing Center in Bakersfiel­d and the Golden State Annex in McFarland launched a joint hunger strike demanding the immediate release of all individual­s detained at the facilities and the shutdown of both detention centers, owned and operated by the private prison contractor GEO Group. Detained people have described living conditions in both facilities as “abhorrent” and “soul-crushing.”

Since then, the hunger strike has grown to about 100. Similar hunger strikes are occurring in other states among the vast network of immigrant prisonsfor-profit passing as “detention” and “processing” centers that constitute “America’s Gulag” — one of our country’s most egregious moral failures, costly boondoggle­s and policy quagmires.

It bears repeating that most of the tens of thousands undocument­ed immigrants imprisoned every year are not criminals but have immigratio­n status irregulari­ties deemed civil infraction­s. The waste of public funds, in the billions every year, is scandalous and unnecessar­y, as there are other proven, community-based approaches to manage immigrants awaiting their immigratio­n status cases to be resolved.

Just last fiscal year (2022), the daily average for the number of immigrants held in these prisons was more than 22,000, costing the American taxpayers hundreds of dollars a day per immigrant to keep them caged in small rooms and under cruel, terrible conditions, sometimes for years.

While this figure is lower than the 34,000 daily average number of held immigrants on the last year of the Trump administra­tion, candidate Joe Biden did pledge to shut down the gulag and adopt the welltested, cheaper, more humane and less harsh approaches. And now, as the appalling conditions in these for-profit facilities have become intolerabl­e to those detained, they have been pushed to desperate measures like hunger strikes.

It’s time President Biden shuts down the gulag and carries out his promise to the millions of Latinos and others who voted for him. And there’s

a way he can do that at the stroke of his pen, even with a gridlocked Congress and a hostile Supreme Court: pardon all undocument­ed immigrants residing in the U.S. for their immigratio­n infraction­s!

It requires political audacity, something in very short supply thus far in this administra­tion; but if Biden does that, overnight there will be no legal basis to keep in detention the thousands of people for their immigratio­n infraction­s; the cruel and immoral gulag will be denied any more bodies to fill their “warm beds” and will have to be shut down — at great taxpayers’ savings!

But more importantl­y, it would bring relief to those many more on the outside, too — the estimated 11 million Americans-in-waiting who have languished for decades waiting and in fear of sudden detention and deportatio­n.

President Biden abandoned too quickly his early efforts to pass comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform when he came into office. While he did introduce a strong bill to Congress in early 2021, the appetite to fight for it quickly dissipated in the face of relentless Republican attacks (and some from Democrats, too) over the surge of asylum-seekers appearing at the border.

All subsequent partial relief bills submitted or included in major funding bills — including the effort made over the

last so-called lame-duck session — failed in the face of total Republican obstructio­nism and Democratic lack of resolve. The hopes were raised among Dreamers, TPSers, and farmworker­s, only to be dashed again.

So, this is another promise the Biden administra­tion and the Democrats in Congress have not delivered on, choosing instead to engage in Kabuki theater performanc­es to feign “commitment” and express lamentatio­ns at the lack of action even when they have controlled both chambers of Congress and the White House. Latinos and other people who voted for them to get immigratio­n reform results are rightfully disappoint­ed (and appalled and disgusted at the Republican­s’ callous obstructio­nism).

A last word on the asylum-seeker crisis at the border. It is real, but only because of the deep state of denial among both parties of the duopoly in Washington. It is a humanitari­an crisis — not a “security” crisis. The fentanyl traffic, for instance, is done by U.S. citizens crossing ports of entry. It’s as if the countries neighborin­g Ukraine would begin closing their borders to asylum-seekers in fear they may be communist infiltrato­rs sent by Putin!

The problem is that the Biden administra­tion has caved to the Republican narrative and is now busy trying to enact

new rules that essentiall­y enforce the notorious “travel ban” that the Trump administra­tion sought to impose on asylum-seekers — which was thrown out of court for violating U.S. and internatio­nal asylum law — prior to adopting the public health “Title 42” rule.

This does not bode well for either asylum-seekers or interior undocument­ed communitie­s, nor for the incarcerat­ed migrants in the gulag, because instead of displaying political courage and boldness, President Biden is showing that he is capitulati­ng to the Republican­s’ relentless nativist immigrant-baiting, manufactur­ed border hysteria and ultra-restrictio­nist policies.

And in so doing, he is betraying American values and his pledges to Latino voters and the immigrant communitie­s — in utter fear of sure-to-come Trumpist attacks — instead of showing leadership and resolve, calling their bluff, and acting boldly. Biden is thus risking the support of his base for his reelection campaign next year, which will surely demand he shut the American gulag, issue a presidenti­al pardon and uphold universal asylum rights!

 ?? PHOTO BY DON BARTLETTI ?? Gonzalo Santos, then an associate professor at Cal State Bakersfiel­d, poses near the U.S.-Mexico border fence in Tijuana, Mexico, on Aug. 17, 2017. He is part of the Dreamers return program conducted by the Long Beach-based California-Mexico Studies Center Inc.
PHOTO BY DON BARTLETTI Gonzalo Santos, then an associate professor at Cal State Bakersfiel­d, poses near the U.S.-Mexico border fence in Tijuana, Mexico, on Aug. 17, 2017. He is part of the Dreamers return program conducted by the Long Beach-based California-Mexico Studies Center Inc.

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