Los Angeles Times

Migrant camps: a modest proposal

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Re “Base could house 47,000 migrants,” June 23

It will not be necessary to build new “tent cities” on military bases to house up to 47,000 immigrants. We already have much of what we need.

The facilities already exist, at least in large part, although the infrastruc­ture needs to be updated. The closest one to Los Angeles is the World War II internment camp at Manzanar in the Owens Valley, a place I visited recently.

The original layout is still in place, with roads, concrete pads for housing, pads and plumbing for shower and toilet facilities largely intact. Kitchen areas are defined. School areas are marked off. Access is easy, as the camp is just off Highway 395.

A number of these facilities are scattered

throughout the United States, and many are in similar shape to Manzanar. Reactivati­ng these camps would save tax dollars.

Plus, we all know how well internment worked during World War II. James Hill Upland

In 1972, the state of California dedicated Manzanar as a historical site and placed a bronze plaque that includes the following oath: “May the injustices and humiliatio­n suffered here as a result of hysteria of racism and economic exploitati­on never emerge again.”

Unfortunat­ely, this history is, shamefully, repeating itself. Michael Hoevel Oxnard

What is the true cost of cruelty? Do we calculate the dollars, the millions that will go into converting military bases to house migrants? The billions paid to the prison-industrial complex?

Shall we count the incalculab­le, the emotional cost to the children separated from their parents? Shall we count the spiritual cost to ourselves, who believed the United States to be a compassion­ate and moral nation?

We will bankrupt ourselves financiall­y and morally if we do not protest. Victoria Mudd Sherman Oaks

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