Andrea Pitzer, clear-eyed on the Trump Administration’s race to build its massive detention and deportation infrastructure:
When I got the contract to write a history of concentration camps in 2014, I really hoped to keep the US from ending up where it is today. That part didn’t work out. But now, it’s critical to understand how much is already underway, and the enormity of what’s coming. The sooner we act to stop it, the more people we can save, and the less infrastructure there will be to dismantle in the future.
The United States of America already has massive capacity to cage people because we’ve over-invested in jails and prisons forever. This administration is gobbling up that capacity.
Prairielands Freedom Fund, a decade-long bond fund here in Iowa City, is seeing a crushing demand from immigrants detained in the reopened, privately owned for-profit North Lake Processing Center, the largest ICE detention center in the Midwest and one of the country’s largest.
It’s a bad as you think.
But our massive prison infrastructure isn’t enough for a campaign promising to deport 20 million people and conceived to terrorize millions more.
More and more news reports are popping up, describing warehouses the administration is acquiring, with plans to convert them to detention facilities. ICE has spent nearly three-quarter of a billion dollars acquiring these formerly commercial sites. And that’s in addition to other places, like the tent city Camp East Montana, already operating around the country.
[…]
Whatever noises Trump made about dialing back the aggressive actions from immigration enforcement agents after the killings of two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis, there has been no real halt to the ethnic cleansing project driven by Stephen Miller and blessed by the president. On the streets, the secret police’s tactics of ICE and Border Patrol are becoming more strategic. But the overall mission is moving full speed ahead.
The work to build this authoritarian support system of concentration camps requires otherwise unused warehouses and commercial sites. Because that’s how you spin up a concentration camp system quickly while you work to build something permanent. The infamous, death camp Dachau started as a closed munitions factory before it was converted into a concentration camp in 1933.
Pitzer offers actionable path to resist including leveraging NIMBY tendencies to slow or prevent the acquisition or opening of concentration camp infrastructure and continuing to make ICE employment and collaboration shameful and taxing by refusing service and threatening costs to companies who provide services.
I struggle with the use of what feels like hyperbolic use of terms like “concentration camp,” not by Pitzer specifically, but generally. It is so loaded, locked into an abhorrent era of human existence, so I appreciate this:
So few people understand exactly what’s happening—this is one of the reasons I encourage the use of the term concentration camp. People recognize that term as an escalation of the usual state of detention. And the current potential for harm is vast.
We seemly use a different term each time we cage humans and stop pretending it’s humane: concentration camp, gulag, interment camp, labor camp. “Camp” feels amorphous. But we’re on the path to death camp authoritarian regime here, so the sooner our nomenclature fits, the better.