The Columbus Dispatch

Immigratio­n crisis is corrupting the US

- The New York Times

Last year, as part of an effort to carry out President Donald Trump’s promise of “extreme vetting” of visitors to the United States, the Department of Homeland Security began collecting social media account informatio­n from millions of people seeking to cross the border.

After all, a radical online could be a radical offline.

That’s why the stream of posts ricochetin­g around a 9,500-member Facebook group, comprising current and former Border Patrol agents as well as some people with no apparent connection to the Border Patrol, is so troubling. Members of the group, as documented by Propublica this week, “joked about the deaths of migrants, discussed throwing burritos at Latino members of Congress visiting a detention facility in Texas on Monday and posted a vulgar illustrati­on depicting Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-cortez engaged in oral sex with a detained migrant, according to screenshot­s of their postings.”

Of a 16-year-old migrant from Guatemala who died while in Border Patrol custody in May, a member of the group wrote, “If he dies, he dies.”

Customs and Border Protection said Monday that it had informed the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general

about the posts and had started its own investigat­ion. The National Border Patrol union decried the posts as “inappropri­ate and unprofessi­onal.”

A reckoning from their superiors is due for any border agents who dishonored their uniform by spreading vileness on social media. In June, when the Plain View Project, a nonprofit research effort, released documentat­ion on dozens of police officers from eight department­s across the country posting racist, misogynist and Islamophob­ic material, 72 police officers in Philadelph­ia were pulled off the streets and the top prosecutor in St. Louis said she would no longer accept cases from 22 officers.

In a larger sense, the Border Patrol Facebook posts reveal a worrying mindset among some of those charged with administer­ing the harshest crackdown on migrants and asylum-seekers in decades. “These are clearly agents who are desensitiz­ed to the point of being dangerous to migrants and their co-workers,” Rep. Joaquin Castro, who heads the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus, told Propublica.

The realities of that crackdown have created conditions that Americans would condemn if they were in another country.

While lawmakers refuse to compromise on emergency aid for the humanitari­an needs at the border, “children are held for weeks in deplorable conditions, without access to soap, clean water, showers, clean clothing, toilets, toothbrush­es, adequate nutrition or adequate sleep,” groups supporting the children wrote in a recent court filing. A judge on Friday ordered Customs and Border Protection to allow health workers into facilities where children are being held to ensure that conditions are “safe and sanitary.”

On Monday, Ocasiocort­ez toured facilities where migrants and asylumseek­ers are being held. “Officers were keeping women in cells w/ no water & had told them to drink out of the toilets,” she tweeted.

As the congressio­nal delegation arrived at one detention facility, they were heckled and cursed at by demonstrat­ors, including one man wearing a Make America Great Again hat. (Another heckler hurled ethnic slurs at Rep. Rashida Tlaib.)

Only a callous person could find mirth in the misery at the border. And only a desensitiz­ed nation could continue to permit the separation of children from their parents — and detaining all of them in atrocious conditions — as a morally acceptable form of deterrence.

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