It Could Happen Here - It Could Happen Here Weekly 86
Episode Date: June 3, 2023All of this week's episodes of It Could Happen Here put together in one large file.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Hey, everybody. Robert Evans here, and I wanted to let you know this is a compilation episode. So every episode of the week that just happened is here in one convenient and with somewhat less ads package for you to listen to in a long stretch if you want.
If you've been listening to the episodes every day this let alone that of title 42 chapter 6a sub
chapter 2 part g section 264 but it's a part of u.s federal law that gives the government the
authority to take
emergency action to keep communicable diseases out of the country. The portion which allows a
sweeping disregard for asylum law, passed in 1944, reads in one giant run-on paragraph sentence as
follows. Whenever the Surgeon General determines that by reason of the existence of any communicable
disease in a foreign country, there is serious danger of the introduction of such disease into the United States,
and that this danger is so increased by the introduction of persons or property from such
country that a suspension of the right to introduce such persons and property is required
in the interest of the public health. The Surgeon General, in accordance with regulations approved
by the President, shall have the power to prohibit, in whole or in part, the introduction of persons and property from such countries or places as he
shall designate in order to avert such danger, and for such period of time as he may deem necessary
for such purpose. Before President Donald Trump's administration used it on March 20th, 2020,
it had been used only in 1929 to keep ships from China and the Philippines from entering US ports
during a meningitis outbreak. But in March of 2020, when you probably weren't paying much
attention because the world was falling apart, or when I'd just returned from a work trip to Rwanda
where I was months before any precautions appeared in the USA, screened for a novel coronavirus,
the Trump administration cited this public health law in instructions to
the Department of Homeland Security on restrictions for migrants entering the United States.
That very same day, Center for Disease Control Director Robert R. Redfield relied on this
regulation to issue an order suspending the introduction into the United States of certain individuals who had been in quote-unquote
coronavirus impacted areas and quote who would be introduced into a congregate setting
at the port of entry or a border station. This includes individuals coming from Canada or Mexico
who would normally be detained by CBP after arriving at the border, people including asylum
seekers and accompanied children
and people attempting to enter the United States between ports of entry.
Citing the new CDC order, that same day, the Border Patrol began expelling individuals
who arrived at the US-Mexico border without giving them the opportunity to seek asylum.
Reports indicate the CDC scientists expressed opposition to the invocation of Title
42, arguing that there was really no public health rationale to support it. Ever since then,
public health experts outside the CDC have continued to agree, arguing that while international
borders largely remain open to other travellers, there is no need to turn away refugees and expel
them to their home countries or send them to Mexico. Despite this, DHS has been applying Title 42 to migrants for three years since then,
and people have been turned away without getting a chance to plead their case for asylum
three million times. Now, Trump is no longer president, but Title 42 has persisted. It's
actually persisted for much longer under
Biden's watch, two years and four months, than it did under Trump, 10 months. But we'll get to
that part later. First, let's look at what this bureaucratic wrinkle does when it's applied for
three years across a land border spanning 3,145 kilometers, that's 1,954 miles for the Americans listening, at a time when climate change,
economic decline, and state and non-state violence are driving more and more people
towards the USA's southern border in the hope of a better life. We're talking about Title 42 this
week because it ended on May 11th. In a sense, this marks an important change in immigration law,
but in a sense it doesn't. Immigration was complicated and cruel for migrants and profitable for people on both
sides of the border before March of 2020. And it's the same after Title 42 has gone.
But nonetheless, Title 42 represents a distinct change in how asylum works in the US,
and especially when combined with other Trump policies that Biden has continued,
and, especially when combined with other Trump policies that Biden has continued,
a distinct change in how many people die when coming to this country to try and have a better chance at a safe future.
By April of 2020, Title 42 expulsions at the border
overtook the previous record for expulsions
under the so-called Migrant Protection Protocol,
which is better known as Remain in Mexico.
That was set in August of 2019.
Under an agreement reached with the Mexican government in late March of 2020,
the Border Patrol began sending quote-unquote back to Mexico,
most Mexican, but also Guatemalan, Honduran and Salvadoran families,
and single adults encountered at the border.
This group of nationalities remained unchanged until May of 2022, when the Biden administration came to an
agreement with Mexico to accept quote-unquote thousands of Cubans and Nicaraguans sent from
the United States to Mexico. But this doesn't really matter. You'll see that a lot in these
episodes. Immigration law on the ground and immigration law in Washington, D.C. are two very different things.
There has been extensive documentation of individuals expelled to Mexico who do not fit within these nationalities,
including Haitian asylum seekers, some of whom I've spoken to myself.
People who are expelled are often driven by bus to the nearest port of entry,
that's a land border crossing, and told to walk back to Mexico, often without their luggage and
other belongings. I've found that luggage and belongings, including ID cards, clothing,
and even little stuffed animals, all along the border, in the three years since Title 42 has
been in place. I asked my friend Paul to describe what we found in Texas when we'd been for a walk along
the border wall during our time reporting on the National Butterfly Center there.
You'd find driver's licenses.
I believe at one point we found almost an information packet.
It was for a teenager, a teenage girl.
I remember that because we got pictures of it
um and then when we took that long walk remember we walked down the border wall uh it was two two
and a half mile walk something like that when we got to the very end of the wall where the the uh
river was um there was just a giant pile of people's stuff and some of it was obviously trash um
you know they were abandoning clothes after they changed from crossing and stuff like that
but a lot of it was full backpacks um a lot of id documents just in piles. Just piles of them.
Yeah, just big piles of documents that proved who you were.
The other thing we found were ladders.
Tons of them.
Apparently, someone built a gazebo out of them.
The wall varies in design a bit along the border,
depending on when and by whom it was built.
But the Trump design has a flat anti-climb plate at the top.
I'll let Paul describe how that's going.
It was literally like somebody went to the hardware store,
bought two of the longest, or actually, sorry,
three of the longest two-by-fours you could,
put two of them beside each other,
and then just nailed steps up them.
So, you know, they were like 16, 20 feet long,
which was enough to just climb over
the wall. Like there weren't, there weren't many places, um, actually, cause most of the wall had
that anti-climb barrier at the top. Whereas when you didn't have the anti-climb barrier, you didn't
actually have something to set it against. But once you put that on there, you can just lean the ladder up against it. It's like self-defeating. Sometimes these expulsions are not as straightforward
as a bus to nearest port of entry. CBP has carried out what are called lateral transfers by plane or
bus, taking migrants to another location along the border, to towns like San Diego or El Paso,
even if they entered in Arizona or California.
This leaves families stranded in a town where they have no connections,
no resources, and no community. Again, these are people I've met.
It won't have escaped the listener's attention that those planes and buses and other means of
detention and transport are indeed congregate settings, but that doesn't seem to matter here.
and transport are indeed congregate settings, but that doesn't seem to matter here.
Title 42 didn't stop people trying to come, but it made the journey more difficult.
Instead of crossing and trying to turn themselves in for asylum, or approaching a port of entry,
people began crossing in more remote places, places without border walls or barriers, and with less frequent border patrols. In 2020, the Border Patrol found 247 dead bodies along the border.
This is unlikely to represent the full human toll of border enforcement.
Many deaths in the desert go unreported and undiscovered.
But it gives some kind of point of comparison for the 2021 number after a year of title 42.
546 people died that year. In 2022, third year of title 42, 857 people died.
None of those people were guilty of any crime other than wanting a better life.
But under title 42, they lost their lives because the U.S. didn't give them a safe way to exercise their human right to claim asylum.
One local advocate, Hamira Yousefi, from a group called PANA, the Partnership for the Advancement of New Americans,
explained what Title 42 had been like for her as an advocate for asylum seekers. When the pandemic hit, we saw that Title 42 heavily restricted those who were able to
seek asylum in this country. So while there was chaos happening and folks around the world who
were trying to come to the United States for refuge, they were unable to do so. And what this
resulted in is people taking an even more dangerous path right than
before and going between the ports of entries in order to try to seek refuge and so we have had
hundreds of cases of individuals who have gotten themselves injured who the hospitals are calling
us because they tried to cross and got injured and we And we're trying to help them with getting some basic legal services
and immediate shelter and those types of things.
Since Biden took office,
Human Rights First says it's identified
more than 13,000 incidents of kidnapping,
torture, rape, or other violent attacks
on people blocked or expelled to Mexico under Title 42.
That's because it's easy for violence to follow people
who have no resources and no community to protect them.
It's for that reason that you won't always see faces
in my photographs at the border.
And that some of the names in this series have changed
or perhaps we're just using someone's first name.
It's also for that reason that not everyone at the border
always wants to talk.
But we do have some interviews coming up for you tomorrow.
Here's a clip from a discussion about this, which I recorded at the border last week.
I'm not trying to get people's faces.
And that's what everybody is doing, our own news.
I can't speak to what they're doing. That's what I'm doing. I don't know about other people.
You should ask, you should, if you think someone's taking a photo of you, it's okay.
I don't have a...
I'm not taking a photo everywhere. Why?
You know, I wish I could tell you.
People who are subject to Title 42 expulsion are not given an opportunity to contest their
expulsion on the grounds they would face persecution in the country to which they
will be expelled. There's a very limited exception to Title 42 for people who
quote-unquote spontaneously inform CBP officers that they fear being tortured in the
country to which they will be expelled. However, in order to receive an official screening by an
asylum officer for exemption under that provision, the CBP officer must first determine that the
claim is reasonably believable. From March 2020 through September 2021, just 272 people were
granted the right to seek asylum under this exception. The use of Title 42
has been, despite the relative lack of outrage since the Biden administration took office,
bipartisan. In 2021, a few weeks before Biden's inauguration, I spent some time talking to
migrants at the southern border for Slate. Many of them had come to a small tent city that had
popped up just feet from the pedestrian border crossing,
and the country that they had travelled thousands of miles to get to, but that they couldn't reach.
You can see America through the fence there, but you can't get there.
The camp was diverse in its composition.
On one trip, I interviewed folks from Haiti, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala and Ethiopia.
Here's what one of them said to me
when he asked for his message to President Biden. You recognize his voice is Daniel's. That's
because I don't have his permission to use his voice here. We are appealing to President Biden.
We aren't bad people. Our goal is to work and get ahead in the world for our children.
We don't want to go back. They will kill us. So we are here. Some of them wore Biden t-shirts,
which I suspect were actually a plant by a right-wing agent provocateur looking to make the new administration look weak
they needn't really have bothered with all the effort biden would do plenty in the next few
months to make himself look cruel and unkind before we talk about that i want to play you
a clip from biden's first press conference president you just listed the reasons that
people are coming,
talking about in-country problems,
saying that it happens every year.
You blamed the last administration.
Sir, I just got back last night
from a reporting trip to the border
where I met nine-year-old Jose,
who walked here from Honduras by himself,
along with another little boy.
He had that phone number on him.
And we were able
to call his family his mother says that she sent her son to this country because
she believes that you are not deporting unaccompanied minors like her son that's
why she sent him alone from Honduras so sir you blame the last administration
but is your messaging and saying that these children are and will be allowed to stay in this country and work their way through this process encouraging
families like Jose's to come?
Well, look, the idea that I'm going to say, which I would never do, that if an unaccompanied child ends up at the
border, we're just going to let them starve to death and stay on the other side.
No previous administration did that either, except Trump. I'm not going to do it. I'm not
going to do it. That's why I've asked the Vice President of the United States yesterday to be the lead person on dealing with
focusing on the fundamental reasons why people leave Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador in the
first place. In the coming months, some of which I covered for an op-ed in NBC about the Biden
administration's cruel treatment of Haitian migrants, things on the border didn't get any
better. Biden deported more Haitian people in a few weeks than the Trump administration did
in a year. 895 people were deported in 2020, versus more than 1,200 people from January 20th
to March 22nd, 2021. While making declarations about showing compassion to migrants,
the Biden administration packed Haitians onto crowded planes and buses and sent them back to Haiti in the middle of a pandemic.
In March, the US sent another pointed disinvitation to Haitians.
The US embassy in Haiti tweeted a picture of President Joe Biden looking off into the distance with a caption in both English and Haitian Creole.
In Creole, it read,
The translation above it was,
In July of that year, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas,
himself a child of parents who fled from Cuba,
said that Haitians and Cubans
fleeing unrest in their countries will not find safety in the US, even if they have a credible
claim for asylum and especially if they flee by sea. In doing so, he was echoing statements that
the US broadcast from planes flying over Haiti following the devastating earthquake in 2010.
Following these announcements, the US diverted resources that it could have used
to help people from suffering in a country which had been destroyed by a natural disaster
to stop them coming to this country.
He was also overlooking that under both international and domestic law,
asylum seekers are entitled to make claims, no matter how they enter the country.
Here's what Mayorca said at his
press conference. Allow me to be clear. If you take to the sea, you will not come to the United
States. Part of this hard line is because of a perceived crisis at the border. You don't have
to go far on twitter.com before you run into people like Fox News' Bill Malugan. Yep, the
tampon in the coffee guy is now a border reporter. And he's shamelessly
repeating CBP statistics about apprehensions on the southern border. Here he is talking to his
buddy Tucker Carlson. Do you remember that guy? Bill Mellugin has covered the border more closely
than any reporter in the United States for the last two years. And today, in his estimation,
the single largest caravan of illegal aliens flowing into this country in his
two years of watching crossed today. He broke the story. He's got remarkable video for us. He's live
at the border now. Bill, great to see you. What did you see? Tucker, good evening to you. You
mentioned it right off the top. This was easily the biggest group we have ever seen during our
19 months of covering this border crisis. And they all crossed illegally into El Paso last night.
And we got some pretty wild camera footage to
show you take a look at this.
This was last night in El Paso,
a massive caravan over over 1000
illegal immigrants crossing into
El Paso last night local media.
They're reporting it was potentially
up to 2000 people and that it was
possibly the biggest mass crossing
in the city's history.
Now as you look at the video,
you'll see
just wave after wave after wave of these people walking across the river and then gathering on
the US side of the river where they kind of form a single file line. But it's not just Fox News
doing this. You'll see NPR and other more liberal outlets quoting these same statistics without the
necessary context. They're not lying. Apprehensions are higher.
But that is in some part because migrants are now crossing more than once. In 2019,
before Title 42 went into effect, just 7% of migrants apprehended by the Border Patrol
had previously been apprehended. The re-apprehension rate grew to 27% in fiscal year 2022.
This is because we're expelling people to places where they have no hope of a better future, The re-apprehension rate grew to 27% in fiscal year 2022.
This is because we're expelling people to places where they have no hope of a better future,
and not leaving them with many options other than to try again in more remote and risky settings.
Meanwhile, there's much less concern from the right and from Democrats at the fact that Ukrainians are exempted from Title 42,
and Russians and Ukrainians generally experience expedited processing
of the sort which one would hope this country could offer
to other people escaping conflicts around the world,
including many that we started.
I asked my friend Gustavo Solis,
a border investigative reporter at KPBS in San Diego,
to summarise the Biden administration's take on Title 42.
On paper, the rationale is there's a pandemic going on.
We need to stop or slow the spread of COVID-19.
So because of this extraordinary circumstance, we need Title 42 to shore up the border.
That was bullshit.
And we know that now through reporting that it was total bullshit. We know that from as early as 2018, Stephen Miller, Trump's White House
aide, wanted to use Title 42 to stop this type of migration. We know that Vice President Mike
Pence pressured the top doctors at the CDC into doing this, basically saying, if you don't do
this, you might lose your job. Because even then then in March 2020, doctors at the CDC knew that there was no real public
health rationale for this.
I mean, if you look at the order, it's supposed to stop COVID, but there weren't any exceptions
for migrants who were vaccinated or there was no testing component to it.
So that's kind of the beginning of Title 42.
By the time Biden came in office, Biden had promised to end it along with remand in Mexico and restore the humane asylum system.
But he kept Title 42 in place and he didn't just keep it in place.
He expanded it to include nationalities that weren't included when Trump first rolled it out.
Even as the legal battle went back and forth, another major bottleneck emerged in the migration system, in the form of the never-ending clusterfuck that is the CBP1 app.
Again, I'll let Gustavo explain his reporting here. It actually kind of started with the Ukrainians.
That was kind of how they started using it for the asylum context. but CBP1 is essentially a phone app for asylum. And on paper, it kind of
makes sense, right? Instead of like, you know, Joe Biden and the Dems are really terrified of the
optics of a lot of people at the border. And a lot of their policy is revolved around stopping that, right? They don't want masses of people at the border.
The CBP One app aims to address that by telling migrants, hey, instead of coming all the way to Mexico and showing up at the border, just download this app and schedule an appointment to come here and we'll vet you to see if you're eligible for asylum or not.
eligible for asylum or not. Another example of a policy in Washington, D.C. that has like no reality in what's going on in the border because migrants live in shelters with really
bad Wi-Fi access and they have crappy phones. So what I found in the reporting is that CBP1 rewards people with the best phones,
not necessarily people who are most vulnerable. And the story I came out with last week was about
how data from the Mexican government shows that at least in Tijuana, about 44% of every migrant
who has gotten a CBP1 application to enter the country is a Russian national.
And Russian nationals make up at most 10% of the overall migrant population in Tijuana.
So you have this situation where a relatively affluent 10% of the population is getting almost half of these humanitarian protection appointments
that are designed for the world's most vulnerable people.
And that's what CPAP1 does.
Like, they call it the ticket master of asylum,
and that's not a compliment.
That is, like, ticket master fucking sucks.
Nobody likes it.
I also spoke to Kaba,
an activist who participated in mutual aid at the border.
We talked about the app,
because Kaba has some professional insight
into the technologies used. I do data science and machine learning related things for a living. And the
problem of building these systems trained entirely on databases of white faces and then them not
working for people of other ethnic backgrounds is very well known in this field. That is a very well
documented issue for more than a decade. And anyone who could tell you that building a facial
recognition or some kind of a camera app that does image processing and only training it on my faces,
this is not something that I think
any competent software development house
would have done and not expected.
So I have a hard time believing that
the whole chain of everyone has had to go through,
from the developers on up to, you know,
anyone who does IT or, you know,
has authority over these things at CBP or at Homeland Security,
this is just, it's like, I don't know, it's hard to believe that this was an accident.
Anyway, before we get too far from discussing things that fucking suck, here's an advertising break.
You might be wondering why Title 42 is ending now,
and how we got here, given that there seems to be a consensus in DC that the border is in crisis,
and that that crisis is not that people were leaving to die on the streets on the other side,
or in the deserts of California and Arizona, but that people were allowing to come to the
richest countries that ever existed, from countries that we've destabilised for decades,
to have a chance at a decent life? Well, the answer is complicated. Some of it's a bit too
complicated for me to really spend the time explaining, and you don't really need to know
the ins and outs of court cases to understand that. Essentially, the Biden administration
had planned to end Title 42 in late 2022, right after the midterms. Title 42 actually became theoretically
unenforceable in November of that year, thanks to a court ruling, but the Supreme Court in December
prevented the Biden administration from amending Title 42, while the justices considered a request
by a group of Republican-led states that want to continue the expulsions, which had previously
been declared unlawful by a lower court. Biden's Department of Justice had previously defended Title 42 as necessary to public health,
but by the end of 2022, they were ready to end enforcement of Title 42 politically,
even if they were nowhere near prepared on the ground.
A coalition of Republican-led states, however, managed to get a federal judge in Louisiana
to prevent officials from ending Title 42,
saying the Biden administration had not taken adequate steps required to terminate the policy. Then on November
15th, another federal judge declared Title 42 unlawful, saying the CDC had not properly explained
the policy's public health rationale or considered its impact on asylum seekers. At the request of
the Biden administration, the judge gave border officials five weeks until December 21st to end Title 42.
Nineteen Republican-led states asked several courts to delay Title 42's rescission indefinitely,
warning that chaos would otherwise ensue. After their request was denied by lower courts,
the states asked the Supreme Court to intervene. On December 27th, the Supreme Court said it would
suspend the lower court order that found Title 42 to be illegal
until it decided whether the Republican-led states should be allowed to intervene in the case.
That's some Christmas spirit for you.
Eventually, with the end of the federal emergency over COVID-19, Title 42 just kind of went away.
Customs and Border Protection, the federal agency which put up the most staunch resistance to vaccine mandates,
Customs and Border Protection, the federal agency which put up the most staunch resistance to vaccine mandates,
would begin processing migrants under Title VIII of US immigration law on the 11th of May 2023.
I'll let them summarise what they see this to mean.
According to the USCIS website, individuals who unlawfully cross the southwest border will generally be processed under Title VIII expedited removal authorities in a matter of
days. They will be barred from re-entry to the United States for at least five years if ordered
removed, and they will be presumed ineligible for asylum under the proposed circumvention of
lawful pathways regulation, absent an applicable exception. What this means is that if you cross
into the United States,
not at the port of entry, you will be assumed ineligible for asylum, and the process to remove you from the United States will begin immediately. You have a chance to file a defensive asylum claim
against that, but the process can be rushed and more difficult. Despite this, and having almost
three years to repair, they were by no means ready.
Let's hear from Gustavo again.
Gustavo, can you explain to us a little bit about what you found that the Biden administration has been planning for the end of Title 42?
Yeah, what I found is they haven't really been doing much planning, right? I mean, they talk about, I think with Title 42,
it's a clear example of immigration policy being decided in Washington
and no one really from the border being involved or told what's going on.
So, like, I think it was last week,
DHS Secretary Mayorkas did this press release about what they're doing in terms of
processing centers in guatemala and colombia so people can just go there instead of coming all
the way to the border which actually there have been timelines of when those will open
but they announced all these things for like big picture things right to stop people from coming in
the first place expanding some legal pathways like making it easier for people with families already here to get sponsors,
fixing some of the little things with CBP1. But they don't talk about like on the ground
logistics, right? So for example, I went to Tijuana to talk to the head of the Department
of Migrant Affairs there, who told me in this,
and I checked with him yesterday morning, who said, still to this day, less than 48 hours before
Title 42 ends, he doesn't know how many migrants CBP will allow to cross through the ports of entry
in San Ysidro. His guess is that maybe 200, because that's kind of the number that they
floated around in December
when they originally wanted to get rid of Title 42
before the lawsuit.
And if it's 200,
he basically said Tijuana's going to be screwed
because 200 doesn't even cover
the number of new migrants coming in
and deportees being sent to Tijuana.
So it's going to like,
we have this bottleneck of migration in Tijuana
and all over
the border because of title 42 for the last three years no one's been able to move and if they just
open it up to 200 people that's not really going to address any of the bottleneck
right there's like i think is it 16 000 people are awaiting like an asylum application
right now yeah yeah i hear different numbers thrown around,
like 10,000, 15, 16.
And nobody really knows
because there's like a network of official shelters
and there's a bunch of unofficial shelters
and there's a bunch of Russian dudes
staying in hotels and Airbnbs.
But I think, yeah, tens of thousands.
I think 16 is an accurate number.
I think it's instructive here
to listen to the Fox News coverage of this
and how much Secretary Mayorkas tries to pander to them.
I want to be very clear. Our borders are not open.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas says when Title 42 expires at midnight tonight,
anyone who arrives at the southern border will be presumed ineligible for asylum and face consequences.
But with holding facilities already overwhelmed,
the administration is ratcheting up tough rhetoric
while also clearing the way for mass releases into U.S. communities
with no way for authorities to track people.
You said at the beginning that you've prepared for this moment for almost two years.
So why is part of that plan an honor system?
Oh, it is not an honor system.
They are a subject
of our apprehension efforts but under parole release authorized by the u.s border patrol chief
last night migrants do not receive an alien registration number for authorities to track them
they don't even get a court date instead migrants are asked to turn themselves into ice within 60
days to start immigration proceedings on themselves. The American people are watching this. They know what they see. They see a wide open border.
Florida's attorney general is suing the administration, arguing the parole plan
is identical to a policy a federal judge struck down earlier this year.
We have confidence in the lawfulness of our actions.
Plans to release migrants at bus stops, gas stations and supermarkets was first detailed
last year, according to a memo uncovered by the Florida legal proceedings.
Today, Texas Governor Greg Abbott sent a busload of migrants to the vice president's residence.
Greg Abbott's disgusting antics aside,
there was a real attempt by the Biden administration to come to the Republican side on migration that we can see clearly here.
In the hours before we expected Title 42 to die, folks like me who cover the border
made plans. The day before, on the 10th, Mayorkas announced that Title 42 would be enforced up until
11.59pm Eastern Time. And in San Diego, Border Patrol officers closed down the port of entry
at San Isidro, the border town just south of San Diego,
for a training exercise in which they lined up in front of the cars
waiting to cross the border with plexiglass shields and riot gear.
Meanwhile, in between the two 30-foot border fences
that divide San Isidro from Tijuana,
Border Patrol began corralling migrants.
Afghans, Colombians, Vietnamese, Koreans, Angolans, Sudanese, Tajiks and Congolese people
all shared little more than a few tarps and cardboard boxes for shelter,
as they waited for something to happen.
Despite having months to repair and years to plan,
it appears the Department of Homeland Security totally failed to create so much as a scrap of shade or shelter,
and instead chose to house people detained pending processing in the open air.
In tomorrow's episode, we'll hear from some of them.
Welcome, I'm Danny Thrill. Won't you join me at the fire and dare enter?
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Submit your podcast today at iHeart.com slash podcast awards.
That's iHeart.com slash podcast awards. I'm a story, be a gunner, talk and watch me. Hey, man grateful, man grateful.
All when nothing not going, man I smile, yeah.
One serious life.
God alone give me everything for survive, yeah.
Enough sacrifice.
Pick up to Jamaica, we are going to do it and come back home.
See? Yeah man, that's it.
One love, Peace. Out.
On the 11th of May this year,
Title 42 finally ended.
I actually began to write this episode
the day before on the 10th of May.
But it was that day that DHS
announced that Title 42 would be enforced
until 8.59pm Pacific
or midnight Eastern. They kept
Title 42 in place for every single
minute they could.
And that same day, 500 active duty troops arrived in El Paso, and a thousand more set off for other border towns to join the 2,500 troops already deployed to the border. According to a press
release from the Department of Homeland Security, CBP and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
are further expanding detention capacity,
ramping up removal flights, and shifting agents and officers to high-priority regions along the southwest border. This week, CBP opened two new holding facilities,
and the Department of Health and Human Services is increasing its bed capacity to prepare for a
potential increase in unaccompanied children. DHS also launched targeted enforcement operations
in high-priority
regions along the border, including El Paso, to quickly process migrants and place them in
removal proceedings. DHS last week also announced over $250 million in additional assistance for
communities receiving migrants. On the ground, this assistance and planning didn't exactly meet
the task at hand. Albeit, the specific call-out of El Paso does suggest that they saw their task as not looking bad in the right-wing media.
Here's some audio recorded after a couple of hours walking around talking to people at San Isidro,
where Customs and Border Protection had detained around 500 people
in between the two 30-foot fences that make up the border between San Isidro and Tijuana.
I'm just, for people familiar with San San Diego like in the Tijuana River Valley Park
by International Hill where border patrol are holding people in between the two border fences.
For those who thought we didn't have a border wall or weren't having a border wall we have at least
two sometimes three uh but right
here we have two um people are being put in between these fences by border patrol so i just
spoke to some young colombian women who had crossed uh about 50 miles east of here and then
been been relocated here and they're in between these border walls they don't have running water
what food and water they have appears to be being supplied by volunteers on the northern side.
They've just been given space blankets.
A lot of people are literally sleeping under bin bags right now on blankets.
It's pretty bleak.
There's one port-a-toilet sort of thing that we can see.
About 500 people.
So it kind of gives you an idea of the conditions.
Obviously those don't live up to the detention conditions that Border Patrol are supposed to hold people under um but here we are i guess border patrol have just said that they're
calling an ambulance there have been a number of medical emergencies that nearly always are in
these situations because you're holding people they're you know old people young people sick
people and they're in the sun all day they're're in the cold all night. If it rains they get wet, if it's hot they get hot, if it's cold they get cold.
Their little children were just asking me for a blanket a minute ago,
which is always a pretty bleak thing.
If you've not been here you'd be forgiven for not knowing that we have a double layer of walls
separating us from our neighbours in Tijuana. Both sections are now of the Trump era design.
But we're standing in a place where not so very long ago Nancy Reagan stood
and said she hoped that there wouldn't be a fence here for very long.
Now there are two towering walls,
and there are little children stuck sleeping in the dust between them.
All the aid to these people had to go through the wall too,
and that meant no hot meals because the gaps are smaller than a plate.
Someone tried to bring
tents, but they wouldn't fit. Everything from food to clothes to medical supplies had to go through
the gaps in the war. Hamara Yousefi, a volunteer from the Partnership for the Advancement of New
Americans, described to me what she saw that night. I see about 500 beautiful smiling faces of people who are desperately trying to get to safety.
And they're confused.
They don't know what's going on.
They don't know how long it will take them.
You know, many of them are aware that something is happening today.
Many of them are asking, does this mean that I'll be turned back?
What is going on?
I see, you know, people who don't even have,
many kids don't have shoes.
They don't have, I talk to individuals
who lost everything on them.
They don't have jackets.
They're trying to cover themselves
with any kind
of covering that they have. Some of them using trash bags, others using scarves and other types
of things to cover themselves from the sun. We are in San Diego, so it's quite sunny here.
The first thing I noticed on arrival was the dozens of hands sticking through the wall,
holding phones and chargers. That's because people need to use the CBP One app to interact with border enforcement.
But they've been detained by the same border enforcement in between two walls in an open field where there obviously isn't any electricity.
They also need their phones to stay in touch with their families,
to let them know they survived a difficult and dangerous journey,
and that they're now technically inside the USA.
survived a difficult and dangerous journey, and that they're now technically inside the USA.
Here's the advert a CBP broadcast in Spanish to encourage asylum seekers to download the app before they put them in a place they couldn't charge their phones.
Attention, migrants in Mexico City or further north in the country,
why do you need to download CBP One? It's a free and legal way to get an appointment guaranteed at a port of entry.
It's a clear way to solicit asylum, and you have the possibility to work while your case is being processed.
If you present without an appointment, you can be prohibited from entering the U.S. for five years.
You will be subject to expedited deportation unless you comply with the strict requirements of the asylum process.
In the majority of cases, it is assumed that migrants do not comply with the requirements for asylum, and you won't have the right to work unless you comply with the strict requirements.
Again, if you are now in Mexico City or further north, download CBP-1.
As we heard yesterday, CBP-1 has been an unmitigated disaster
and has shown a very clear bias towards certain types of wealthy and white asylum seekers.
Despite that, it seems to have been the only plan in place at the end of Title 42.
The hundreds of people detained in between defences presumably didn't have appointments,
and with no way to charge their phones, they couldn't make them.
It's not clear if making them would have helped,
as it seems that they were already being detained and thus they would have to file defensive
asylum claims, effectively stopping the repatriation process by claiming that they couldn't safely be
sent back to their country of origin. This is opposed to making an affirmative asylum claim
that people should have been able to make at the border with a CBP1 appointment.
These would not have to be argued with the threat of repatriation
hanging over the person making the claim.
Volunteers, local people, a mosque group and a church group
all showed up soon after CBP began dumping more people in between the fences.
An hour after my own arrival,
I'd given away all the charge cables that I had in my truck,
which is a lot more charge cables than I thought I had in my truck.
And all my charge bricks accrued over six years of getting free shit at the consumer
electronics show in Las Vegas. Later, I came back with a massive solar generator that I like to use
when I'm living off grid, but I still need to write stuff. Even all my home electronics ephemera,
and the combined efforts of nonprofits, religious and mutual aid groups couldn't really make much
difference to the 500 people from around the world, mostly families with children, being held between the two fences.
When it got hot, they got hot. When it got cold, they got cold. When the wind blew,
they got dust in their eyes, and everything was constantly dirty. The only hot food volunteers
could get to them was pizza. Some of the detained people had cash, and they were able to order DoorDash on the Tijuana side,
but again the meals had to fit through a hole barely wider than my arm.
The only way to get clean was with wet wipes, and there was only one bathroom.
There was no shade or shelter either, and the only way people could construct shelters
was through tying tarps to the border wall itself.
I'll let Kaba,
one of the volunteers who came to help, describe what they saw when participating in Mutual
Aid a couple of days after.
But it was, it definitely was, I don't think it really struck me until, you know, after
everything, you know, after I left several hours later, but the kind of, I mean, I had read about the situation
at the border, but the kind of matter of factness
of there's just several hundred people, including children,
just kind of between this fence,
and they're just stuck there with nothing.
And the sort of matter of factness of that all was,
I think the part that struck me the most and has been the most challenging to process.
In the days before the end of Title 42, confusion had reigned at the border.
A lot of people I talked to mentioned that they thought they had to cross before the end of Title 42,
or they would be ejected and not able to apply for five years under Title VIII.
This misunderstanding might, in part, be due to some of the misleading rhetoric put out by
Mayorkas and others, which focused on the harsh penalties for crossing between ports of entry in
an attempt to appear strong on the border to their colleagues in DC. They didn't place as much
emphasis on the right to present and claim asylum at a port of entry. But, as we saw yesterday, it's virtually impossible to actually do that,
and Tijuana is already full of thousands of people trying to do that exact thing.
Given a set of circumstances, it makes sense that many people took the days before the end of Title 42
as the final chance to cross.
Before Title 42 ended, I spoke to Diana Rodriguez from Colombia about her understanding
of what was going to happen later that night. Diana was with two friends, all of them wearing
little daisies in their hair and sharing a tarp shelter they'd made by tying a blue tarp
against the wall so they could get some shade and privacy. I asked her where the flowers had come from.
You'll hear the rest of the interview voiced by Shireen.
Oh, the flowers.
The flowers, well, there are these little flowers,
flowers that are growing here like in a garden.
So when we went and took a walk over there and we found them, we put them on and they're pretty.
We call these the little yellow flowers of hope,
and they match the color of our bracelets. We picked them on the day we arrived and we knew that we needed a little bit
of encouragement. We got the yellow bracelets because we arrived on Tuesday. Everyone got the
same bracelet. I asked Diana what she'd heard about Title 42, which was ending a few hours after we talked. Yes, it's the end of Title 42.
Title 42 is the one that endorses mass deportations.
Yes, and well, it's a question of you not just getting deported,
but being repatriated.
In other words, after this, they do a full repatriation.
But right now, you are not registered in the system. But what
they do is that they only return you. They don't register you. But let's say on the basis of Article
8 is that if you, at least we, are invading American territory, then we are in effect breaking
a law. And what Article 8 does is that they deport you and they put you in the registered database
saying that you broke the law and they punish you for five years and you lose the right to
request your asylum through legal channels. People at another camp in Jucumba heard the
same thing from Colombians. And it seems like there are even news pieces run on domestic television
explaining that the US plan to return many Colombians in the coming months and this might be the last best chance to cross the
border without permanent consequences if you got caught. In Okumba, volunteers estimated that two
thirds of the people corralled under the desert sun were from Colombia. Of course, in recent years
there has been instability and violence there, which also drives migration. One of my sources
also mentioned a lot
of Colombian people had seen misleading information about immigration law on TikTok.
Two days had passed since Diana arrived. She came with one of the girls she was now sharing a tarp
with and met another when they were all dumped in the camp together. In the days before they
were detained here, they had crossed three countries on their way to what they hoped was
a better life for young women like them.
I asked them to describe that journey for me.
Eight days, eight days more or less, walking from Colombia,
from El Salvador to Guatemala, then Mexico to here.
All that time, walking and taking the bus.
There's a part 15 or 20 minutes from here where the wall ends, and we crossed there.
There was a Mexican patrol, and when they changed shifts, we ran. And here we are on American soil.
We arrived on foot, and the police brought us here. They opened the gate and dropped us here.
Along the way, she said, they'd run into a lot of people. The migrant journey north is such a
common trek that people living along the way have found a way to make a buck,
but also a way to make a difference.
It's not uncommon for migrants to be extorted, robbed or threatened.
It's also not uncommon for them to be fed by strangers,
perhaps handing off bags with food in them to passing trains or buses,
or perhaps given a place to sleep for the night
by someone they might never see again.
There were parts where we were extorted. They took all the money we brought. They robbed us,
they stole our passports, they stole our documents. So it's always quite dangerous.
Let's say that it's dangerous to take this journey. Yes, just as we have met some bad
people along the way, we have also met some very good people. People who have given us a hand,
people who have helped us, people who have collaborated with us in ways you least expect. I asked Diana what she
hoped for now she was technically inside the USA. Yes, let's say the hope is that they will listen
to our case, listen to our case and let us fight the case inside. Yes, because we want to be able
to explain the conditions we are in and the reasons that
those of us who are here came here. Things like extortion, kidnapping, and because our lives are
in danger in Colombia. So we wish that they at least listen to our case and let us plead our
cause. Before we started recording, Deanna asked what network I was with. I thought that was an
astute question.
Networks like Fox show up at the border, although I didn't see any Fox national reporters on my trip.
Certainly local news channel KUSI was there, but their reporting on the ground differed from their xenophobic and outright incorrect online coverage. I asked Diana what she'd want to say to folks who
might have had their perspective influenced by the constant demonization of migrants by right-wing media. There are many people who, let's say, are in a mindset of not wanting migrants and they view
them with contempt. Because where xenophobia exists, it's hard for us, because we suffer along
the way. We would like you to change your way of seeing things and your way of thinking, so that
you don't look at us with contempt. We have a saying in Colombia that says that he who was born in a golden cradle never
suffers or never sees what he does not know. So it's hard when you're born in a golden cradle
and you don't see beyond what you have. So there are people that in our case, in my case,
I lived a very hard life where you see the war between armed groups.
They exist outside the law and they can control an area.
And you see the kidnapping.
You see the rape of girls, recruitment, extortion, death.
Yes.
So it's hard when we experience that and people say things like these migrants are coming to invade our country.
We also ask them to treat us as people,
because if we are here,
it is not because we want to invade a territory.
It is because we want to come to fight
for a better future for our children
without stepping on anyone.
Nobody wants this.
But where we come from,
we receive travelers with open arms.
And it's hard when one is a migrant, when one lives the experience of being a migrant.
It is a very hard thing to be a migrant, having to endure cold, hunger, rain, sun.
That is, all these things.
And then arriving here and seeing faces of contempt.
It's hard.
It is very hard.
So, yes, the important thing is that people must know that being an immigrant is not easy.
Being an immigrant is not easy.
One of her friends who she was sharing a tarp with leaned over to give an example.
Everyone despairs because everyone wants to leave.
So everyone sees each other as enemies.
So let's say, for example, right now, when they are sending cars to collect people to process.
So everyone there thinks, I hope they take me.
Then when they don't, it gets to a point where, yes, where you despair.
I mean, it's desperate, but well, everyone, everyone is in the fight together, all in the fight.
After yet another dusting down from a CBP agent who really liked to razz his quad bike past the mutual aid tables,
I spoke to a man from Angola.
I'll leave his name out, as he preferred for me not to share it.
He'd been in Tijuana for three days, he said, and was waiting his chance to plead his case for asylum.
It's just me and my sister.
We suffered a lot. There were bandits.
We came here to be safe. It's no me and my sister. We suffered a lot. There were bandits. We came here to be safe.
It's no way to live.
People broke into our house to violate women, to look for people.
And I was injured then.
Yeah, why did I leave to come here?
Over there, they're not the means to live.
We didn't get a chance to talk for long,
and some of the recording I got wasn't very good.
He was waiting in line for food, and to be quite honest honest I don't like prodding people to share their trauma but with so many
journalists crowding the border asking them to do just that it tends to be what people offer.
Lots of African migrants can be quite cautious of the media because talking to the media at home
could get them in trouble. I spoke to a friend of mine himself a migrant from Africa. He said that
if migrants don't speak English or Spanish it can be very hard for them to get information. And there aren't as many
non-profits set up to serve them as there are for Spanish-speaking people, for example.
They can often end up isolated and alone. I did get a better chance to talk to a Jamaican man
called Joseph. It's his singing you've heard at the start of this episode. Mostly, we talked about
things in America, about how
he lost his phone on his journey, we got him another one at Walmart, and about things like
football and music. I didn't record all of that because sometimes it's nice to just talk
to people. Hopefully it makes their day a bit brighter and gives them some information
maybe that could help. He did let me record a bit of an interview, and some of him singing.
He was pretty guarded on the recording
but as you can hear in this clip we had a good time when we weren't recording. I got my mask off. You know it's a legend, isn't it? Be a gunner talk and a watch me Hey, man grateful, man grateful
All when nothing a go on, man a smile, yeah
One serious life
God alone give me everything for survive, yeah
No sacrifice
Pick up to Jamaica, we a go do it and come back home, see?
Yeah man, that's it, One love. Peace. Out.
That was beautiful.
Yeah, I'm Joseph.
I asked him about some of the stuff we spoke about before,
but he didn't want to share it.
Yeah, yeah.
That's a whole testimony.
Me and you and God have to go into church for that.
But I'm going to give you that the next time.
Okay, buddy.
All right.
Joseph experienced a lot of personal harm from conflict back home in Jamaica
and had a difficult journey here with his five-year-old son. Yeah, it's rough. It's rough out there, man. Yeah. Joseph experienced a lot of personal harm from conflict back home in Jamaica, and
had a difficult journey here with his five-year-old son.
Yeah, it's rough. It's rough out there, man. You know, it's rough.
How did you come? Like, you comeā¦
I asked him how his young son had dealt with the journey. It's not a safe or easy one
for an adult, let alone for a little child.
It's just kind of scary, but he pulled through.
Yeah, that's good.
Because he has my energy Yeah, that's good.
He has my energy inside.
That's good, yeah.
How have you found it here in the camp?
Oh, here at the camp?
I don't know, but that guy is just like me.
We just don't make anything better.
Yeah, but it's working here because you guys give us the strength and support in us, you know?
Joseph wanted me to know that he wasn't giving up his home.
He loves Jamaica, but he also wants a better life for his son.
It's not like I'm giving away my home.
My home is a good place.
It's a good island, nice place to be.
Of course, this perspective is very common,
and it's one that often gets left out of reporting.
Coming to the USA is a very hopeful act.
It's not abandoning your family or your home.
It's trying to make their lives better and your life livable.
Joseph was quite guided with this story, and that's fine.
It's his to share as much or as little as he wants.
I came to the USA without having to get persecuted or hurt,
and people who don't look like me should have that same right as well.
Sadly, coming to the USA is also scary and confusing, even for me with three university degrees and all the intersectional privilege I have and 15 years living here and
a recently minted US passport now, I worried for years that maybe I'd made a mistake on a form or
missed some kind of deadline. Speaking of deadlines, what none of
the migrants could tell us, what they all wanted to ask about, was exactly what was happening to
them as Title 42 expired. A Congolese lady asked me if her passport would be confiscated. A lady
from Senegal asked if she needed to pay a bribe like the one she'd paid in Mexico. It wasn't
really clear at first if these people were being detained and under what process they were being received. Would they be sent back to Mexico under Title 42? Repatriated under Biden's
interpretation of Title 8? Or given the right to plead their case if international and US law
suggests they should be able to? CBP made people sit in lines all day with no indication of when
they would be taken to the port of entry for processing. Sometimes I heard people saying if everyone didn't sit down, there
would be nobody processed that day. But the only food, water and medical attention available
to the migrants was that which could be passed through the wall. And they had to get out
of their lines to receive this aid. I'll let Kaba describe what this looked like.
They had people waiting in lines that hoped they had to sit in a line in a specific assigned spot.
But it wasn't always clear how those lines actually worked because they would kind of take people from lots of places.
I think they might have been prioritizing families with children or people with some kind of medical needs or something like that.
or people with some kind of medical needs or something like that.
But you would never know when they were going to come. And we didn't seem to know also who they were going to choose to take.
We assume we didn't know exactly where they were taking them,
but we assume they were taking the port of entry in San Ysidro,
which is about a mile away.
And so what would always happen when they come and get a group is like three
or four people from that group would sprint over to the wall
because we still had their phones and CDP wasn't going to wait for us to get the phones. One thing a lot of people we
talked to shared was that there was another camp which we later found housed as many as 800 single
men. It's fairly usual to keep single men apart from families but keeping them in an inaccessible
place without adequate food or water is not usual.
The camp was further west, and despite repeated requests from myself and others,
including those delivering aid, we were not allowed to access it.
One pair of Jamaican twins, both young men, told me they had walked up there and that things were very bad. People were only given one small water bottle and granola bar every day, they said.
People were only given one small water bottle and a granola bar every day, they said.
One person told me they'd heard people were eating grass.
I asked CBP's press office for information on this, but they didn't respond.
Here's one clip of a man trying to explain how bad things were there.
It's hard to communicate across language barriers, and with a wall between you it's even harder,
but I could tell he was very concerned for the folks we couldn't get to.
Despite myself and others trying, and me addressing this issue directly in emails to CBP, I never
got any response on why people were not allowed to help the single men in the other camp.
Just not helping.
One water.
Yeah, what little water?
One chocolate.
Finish.
Nothing else?
No food, no water, blanket, clothes?
Dollar.
Nothing?
No. Nothing else, no food, no water, blanket, clothes, nothing.
Money, finish.
I'll go try and go up there.
Even with these camps being pretty desperate places, folks look after one another.
We spoke a lot with one lady who spoke English. She was there
with her own family but she was also looking after two Tajik children who'd come alone.
Their mother spoke a little English so she relayed news to the children by calling their mother
and having her translate it for her children. Other folks took it upon themselves to try and
walk to the camp for single men with water and people constantly helped us find the owners of phones by wandering through the rows of people sheltering
under tarps and space blankets to look for people who had left us their devices to charge.
In Okumba, a town an hour or so east of San Diego, things were worse. Okumba's home to a cute hotel,
a lovely lake, a hot spring,
and an awful lot of big rocks. When the border wall was being built in earnest before the 2020
election, they skipped some of the harder areas. Perhaps they figured it would be too hard to cross
there. It's not. Perhaps they wanted to maximise the mileage before election day. Well, it didn't
help much. But either way, for some reason, the wall just takes a little break in Okumba,
and this makes crossing marginally easier there. However, the boulder fields, scorching hot days,
and cold nights make it anything but easy. On Thursday night, the 11th of May, locals in Okumba
became aware that CBP were holding people on a dirt road in the open desert just a few miles
east of town, and a few hundred feet from the wall.
The people held they didn't have access to toilets, running water, or shelter.
With every hour that went past, the number of people grew. The biggest camp soon held over a thousand people, desperately trying to scratch out a little shade in the desert.
Other, smaller camps popped up. One was apparently in someone's yard,
and the people of this tiny desert town said about helping as best they could. Soon they were joined by volunteers from all over the county.
Katie was one of those volunteers. She doesn't live in Okumba but her friends do and her family
sometimes spends time there. Once she heard about what was happening she knew she had to help.
I let her describe her feelings after she saw the posts online and then drove
out to Okumba to see what she could do to help.
At first I was just super touched by the in our Mercedes van and my husband is
still trying to get citizenship after being here since he was two years old
so and we're married and he pays taxes and when I saw our friends activating I just told him tomorrow is Mother's
Day and I need to come back here and it's not safe for you here so when I first arrived
I thought it was kind of odd that everything was organized around a random road that has
a gate and there were five only five Border Patrol at the time and about that
was a larger camp so I want to say at least 800 people, maybe 1,000.
I didn't see them all because many of them received their donations
and the assistance and went back to their shelters.
A few days after the migrants arrived, I camped out in Hukumba.
I was cold in my sleeping bag at night and dizzy in the sun in the day. A few days after the migrants arrived, I camped out in Hukumba.
I was cold in my sleeping bag at night and dizzy in the sun in the day.
It's not a place where you'd want to be stuck outside for long,
but it's a place where 1,500 or so people were held for days,
little more than the shelters they built out of creosote and mesquite to protect their families from the elements.
They slept on the dirt or in cardboard boxes left over from the food volunteers fed them,
and under whatever folks in tiny desert town could find to give them.
By the time I arrived, the migrants were gone and volunteers were cleaning up.
The landscape was dotted with impressively constructed brush shelters.
Volunteers from Hakumba set up tables to distribute food, blankets, water and clothing.
Other volunteers stayed away from the camp itself
and spent time packing things into individual sizes,
perhaps combining hats and socks and maybe a toy for a child in one bag,
or breaking down Costco packages of snacks into individual portions.
It's not necessarily the most rewarding task, but it's an important one.
I asked Marissa, another volunteer who had previously worked in San Diego
for the Forest Service, what she felt when we were cleaning out some of those shelters together a
couple of days later. I don't know the best way to say this, but what hit me deeper was when,
this might seem strange, but when I saw women's sanitary napkins or the diapers or the babies like it was kind of
like a fabric padded crib bassinet type thing that suddenly hit me on a deeper level would make me
emotional because it's like then you start to realize like, what if that was me and my child?
Or I'm not a mother, but I can only imagine what that must be like for them to be going through these things as a woman being on your period.
And being out and not having anything, you know, going to the bathroom out there.
What do you use when you don't have those supplies? So yeah, it just, that was when it hit me deeper and, um,
and I knew I was doing the right thing by being out there and helping in whatever way I could.
Cause I don't because I don't
I don't when it comes to the politics side of it when it comes to
like legality and just different aspects of it in that way I I don't have necessarily an opinion
one way or another I'm not educated enough to feel like I can argue one way or another or defend one position or another.
I went out there purely for my love of humanity.
And I think being able to support in whatever way I can, that was the way that I felt like I could serve and be a support.
Katie hadn't expected to meet migrants at a camp when she first showed up.
be of support. Katie hadn't expected to meet migrants at the camp when she first showed up.
She knew it was important not to flood the camp with volunteers, and their help was needed packaging and preparing aid drops, which she was happy to do. But in the end, she traveled up to
the camp with a friend who spoke Portuguese, so they could help translate and distribute supplies.
I asked her what it was like to see the supplies she'd purchased a few hours before
end up in the hands of people who desperately needed them.
They don't even have a grocery store in Hukumba. They have one mini-mart with nothing
in it. And that was sold out the first day. So these people who we would look at without a lot of resources
passing the abundance of what they actually have. Well I saw a lot of
families there I could tell that there were leaders within the group because
they were helping organize as much as the volunteers were and unfortunately
there was language barriers you know and so those that could speak multiple languages
whether they were border crossers or volunteers were together in it and that was part of that organization that I'm talking about,
you know, and it was actually a very calm scene. When we first came up, I saw my son's hat
that I donated and a little boy hugging this jaguar stuffed animal and the jaguar was really
significant to my friend and I when we found it so it was really touching just to like
see see the things that we were bringing being literally being distributed like sometimes when you think you're helping
I worked for a door-to-door campaign when I was in my teens and I got 50 percent of what I raised
so and it was like disheartening and you're like oh this is how it works and in this case
And in this case, money that I directly spent on resources that were needed was going directly to the people.
In all likelihood, people crossed in a specific spot because someone dropped them there,
telling them it would be easy.
In fact, it was anything but.
People die crossing around here.
In the dirt around Jucumba, I found discarded flight itineraries
and documents from Turkey, Nicaragua, Colombia, Mexico. There were also little children's toys,
shoes, and hundreds of empty water bottles which we diligently picked up.
But none of the more than 1,000 people who the Border Patrol held in this camp
had planned for what they got, which was several days being detained in the desert by CBP with
insufficient water,
no shelter and very little food, and no information on what was happening or how long they could expect to be there. Sadly, I didn't get there in time to speak to any of them.
I was in Arizona looking for border vigilantes and wondering what CBP had been doing to migrants
there where they have the full support of local law enforcement and a large percentage of the
aging population.
To my surprise, I didn't find much.
It seems like most people had crossed in the San Diego County area.
Many had flown or walked to Tijuana.
Of course, migrants just like us have access to the news and to weather forecast and maps.
Crossing in Arizona, a place known for cruelty and very hot weather,
doesn't make any sense when California offers a better political and weather climate.
And with the mixed messages coming out about immigration law,
these folks may not have been intending to evade Border Patrol,
but to come to the USA and stake their legal right to claim asylum.
I spoke to Sam, a volunteer with extensive on-the-ground experience in humanitarian crises, about what he'd seen at the camp.
Oh, my name is Sam Schultz.
He said many of the people who found themselves in Okumba had likely been told,
by people smokeless, that this was an easy way into the US.
In the end, it was anything but.
I mean, I know they didn't expect that they were going to just waltz across the border
at a normal check station, but they thought it was going to be,
they were sold a bill of goods, let's put it that way.
Right, like a tough night of walking.
Yes, that's it yeah and so uh i mean i feel sorry for anybody who's taking advantage of it like that
but most of the people that i met again who are not colombians yeah were of the wealthier side of
the on their countries i met some speckies some kazakis a bunch of people from india a couple of
pakistani guys my rain i mean they didn't get here cheap.
The wall behind the people in Hukumba cost $25 million a mile on average.
The Border Patrol agents drove around in F-150 Raptor trucks that start at $80,000
and each make a starting salary of over $60,000 in their first year.
Surveillance towers that dot the desert, including one which provided
a tiny scrap of shade to migrants resting under its solar panels, can cost a million dollars apiece,
but people in Okumba received only one small water bottle each day, despite the punishing weather.
Although Customs and Border Protection did not seem to make any plan to shelter migrants in
Okumba, they did plan to have contractors paid $40 an hour to take them away. I found a job advert for a Southwest Border Transportation
and Security Officer at ISS Action Security. The agency photographed transporting migrants
in Okumba. The job posting, which was posted two weeks before the end of Title 42,
has a description that includes patting down all detainees
and applying appropriate restraints prior to boarding vehicles.
The process through which migrants become detainees normally involves processing,
which had not been done in Nukumba,
but it seems a presumption of ineligibility announced on the day Title 42 ended came into effect here.
This might seem a minor
distinction, but it's important. It means that people have to file a defensive asylum claim,
and not an affirmative one. They have to plead why they shouldn't be deported, rather than why
they have a right to stay. Many of the people will have been trying to cross before the end
of Title 42, like Diana, because they felt they would face a less serious penalty. Many of them flew
to Tijuana or walked from further south in Mexico or even in Central America and likely spent their
entire savings on a trip to the gap in the wall near Jucumba that ended with them being held by
Border Patrol in the open desert with next to nothing in the way of shelter, sanitation,
or sustenance. As a way to quantify this, I want to reference a UCSD, US Immigration Policy Center, report.
It apparently had some pretty problematic practices, but anyway, these are results from its survey.
When asked whether Border Patrol gave them enough water for the day,
over half of the asylum seekers that we interviewed, approximately 53%, said no.
Border Patrol distributed one water bottle to each migrant in the morning.
When asked whether Border Patrol gave them enough food for the day, all of the asylum seekers said
no. Border Patrol did not distribute any food. When asked whether Border Patrol provided adequate
sanitation, such as toilets, all of the asylum seekers that we interviewed, meaning 100%,
said no. Border Patrol provided one port-a-body for
the entire encampment. When asked whether Border Patrol provided adequate shelter, such as shade,
to protect them from the sun, all of the asylum seekers that we interviewed said no, Border Patrol
did not provide any shelter. When asked whether Border Patrol provided blankets to keep them warm
at night, all but one of the asylum seekers we interviewed said no, Border Patrol provided blankets to keep them warm at night, all but one of the asylum seekers we interviewed said no.
Border Patrol provided blankets to some migrants,
but the overwhelming majority did not receive blankets.
Altogether, two-thirds of the asylum seekers we interviewed
said that they agree or strongly agree with the statement,
if I did not receive food and water from volunteers,
I would not get enough food and water from Border Patrol to survive.
These aren't exaggerations.
As we'll see, several migrants did come very close to losing their lives in the five or more days that CBP detained people out in the open along the border.
Medical incidents in this kind of detention are far from uncommon.
A lawsuit filed against Customs and Border Protection by the Southern Border Communities Coalition regarding their actions this week stated that, quote,
Many migrants have fallen into medical distress because of the conditions,
and CBP has been slow to provide access to medical attention, often only responding at the
insistence of advocates. As a result, one woman suffered life-threatening allergies, a child
suffered an epileptic seizure and a man suffered an unattended infection on his leg. Medical
attention was slow to arrive and when it did arrive it was often insufficient. I'll let Kaber
describe the conditions they saw a couple of days after the end of Title 42.
That's really the part that is hard to understate.
The conditions there were not safe or sanitary.
I guess this is sort of related to the medical issues, but there was, it's been, you know,
to their credit this aspect has been reported in the media but there was a single portable toilet for
anywhere from I guess there's probably 200 to 400 people there. I heard a couple different
citations of how often this toilet is serviced and cleaned and the waste removed anywhere from once
or twice a week to once every week or two weeks. Either way that's
not remotely sufficient for 400 people using the bathroom multiple times a day in this single
portable like just a construction site toilet. It was right next to the phone charging station on
the other side of the wall and I would just feel sick if I got too close to it.
It was really vile.
It was not safe.
It is not a way for people to be healthy.
I do know, I think a lot of,
thankfully people stop using it, but
then they don't have a privacy,
that's still not a sanitary situation to be in.
Since they don't have a huge amount of space where they were.
So that's definitely one of the ways that people are being neglected in terms of their health and safety.
Here's Humaira, who we'll hear more from tomorrow, describing another medical incident.
And the call that I got this morning was of a woman who was rushed out
because she had an emergency situation taken to the hospital.
The hospital didn't know what to do with her,
so they sent her right back here in the middle of the night,
in the middle of the night, and they brought her here.
She doesn't have any documents.
CBP didn't get a chance to process her yet,
so she doesn't even have any proof that she actually came to the port of entry
and tried to seek asylum, and she was just sleeping right here
and she has burns all over her body has an infection i read the the the seven medications
that they gave her and she speaks daddy she's from afghanistan her husband got taken by the taliban
and she escaped running for her life and she's here and she has sunburns all over her face and she has
nowhere to go.
She thought she was still detained.
She actually thought she was still detained.
She was just trying to get back to the other side of the border.
She thought she was still in Mexico.
No one explained anything to her.
They brought her back here in the middle of the night and she was freezing.
And so we brought, that's why I came out here.
I talked to her the other
folks who were out here didn't know why she was just sleeping here and I came
out and tried it and translated and now we have her at a hotel.
Kaba witnessed one of the emergencies described in the southern border
communities coalition lawsuit when they visited the camp. Here's them describing it.
In terms of you know medical care as well like I said one of the parts of the aid operation that was going on
was people, I think it was a combination both of people
who were in street medicine as well as people who were like nurses
volunteering their time and things like that.
And mostly taking care of just kind of routine first aid for the most part.
There was a situation where someone was having an allergic reaction,
a fairly severe one, and I happened to carry an EpiPen,
so I simply gave that to one of the street medics.
And then they eventually did pull this person.
The reaction got severe enough that it was an hour or so later
that 911 was called, I assume by one of the volunteers,
and ambulance and border patrol came to open the gate
and bring this person to the country.
They did eventually treat her, but it was a very...
it was a long time after the onset of symptoms, which is
someone... as someone who
has anaphylaxis reactions to food
and it's something that happened many times in their life that is an absolutely terrifying...
I cannot imagine how terrifying it would be to
be experiencing
a life-threatening situation when you are trapped and there's
no authority that really cares that you're there.
And I don't know if she would have been able to get help if there hadn't been volunteers
on the other side of the wall, especially ones with medical training.
Where volunteers weren't, things were worse.
In Texas, Anadis Tanev Reyes-Alvarez, an eight-year-old
girl born in Panama to Honduran parents, died in CBP custody. Rocio Reyes, the girl's father,
told NBC News that they gave authorities documents about the girl's medical conditions,
congenital heart disease and sickle cell anemia, while they were in immigration custody. They said that a doctor there examined Anadith and that she had contracted the flu.
Alvarez, her mother, said she spoke to both detention authorities and medical personnel
at the station multiple times to explain her daughter was complaining of pain and shortness
of breath and that she was getting worse. I'll quote the next part directly from the NBC story.
They never listened to me, she said. Reyes said his daughter was in a lot of pain, a lot of pain.
I begged them to call an ambulance, Alvarez said, adding that authorities told her the
girl's condition wasn't serious enough to warrant calling an ambulance. Alvarez said her daughter begged authorities as well,
telling them she could not breathe from her nose or mouth.
Alvarez says that eventually her daughter lost consciousness and died in my arms.
She said authorities took the girl from her arms and put her on the floor, trying to revive her.
My daughter died there, in the station, she said.
Avra said she feels authorities did not do enough to help her little girl.
My daughter is a human being. They had to take care of her, she said.
Despite what you might have heard on the network news, the asylum process is anything but easy.
I've had several visas, a green card, and a US passport, and I can confidently tell you the only
easy way I've ever seen to come here is to be very rich. But even among the convoluted bureaucratic
mess that is US immigration, the asylum process stands out as both rigorous and complicated.
Asylum is a process by which people unable or unwilling to return to their country
because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion,
nationality, politics or membership of a particular social group may remain in a safe country.
From the 11th of May onwards, migrants at the border were assumed ineligible for asylum if
they crossed between
points of entry. They must enter the defensive asylum process to prevent themselves from being
deported. What this means for people we heard from earlier is that they are now taken from
whatever godforsaken holding area they're in and bussed to a processing facility, where they're
interviewed by an asylum officer to determine if they have a credible fear of persecution.
They may need to provide a translator if there isn't an interviewing agent who speaks their
language. And if they're determined to have a credible fear, they're told to check in with the
US Customs and Immigration Office, and sometimes given a notice, which may or may not be dated,
to appear in court. My colleague Joe tried to get into one of these hotels to talk to one of
the people we'd spoken to at the border, but he was pretty quickly shut down.
Hey, how you doing?
Hey there.
I'm a freelance journalist.
I'm here reporting for my boss, James Stout.
He's at iHeartMedia.
I'm wondering if you're letting media in here to see the conditions.
Absolutely not.
Okay.
And also, we ask you guys not to constrict any of this area here.
Okay.
So if you're going to set up, it has to be on this side of the line
because you have a lot of traffic.
Yeah.
And it's very dangerous for you, okay?
So like beyond here or past the coast?
That's correct.
Yeah.
From here, over.
Okay, cool.
I'll stay out of your way.
Thank you, sir.
One of the folks we'd met was able to stay in touch via WhatsApp
and share the hotel rules with us.
They were pretty strict.
Migrants are confined to their rooms.
They can't have visitors, and they can't even order food delivery.
From the hotel, where they're hosted by Catholic charities,
migrants need to get to their sponsor in the United States if they have one.
If they don't have one, they can be sent just about anywhere.
I've heard of East African folks having ended up in Alaska, for example.
Once they get to where they're going to be,
they check in with US.s customs and immigration services
in their new location and they're given a special phone which also tracks their movements
they may have a dna sample taken in addition to fingerprints later sometimes years later
they attend a court hearing or two to determine their eligibility to stay i've heard of lawyers
charging from five thousand dollars to twelve thousand for these hearings, and non-profit legal
assistance services are totally overwhelmed at the moment. The system's massively backed up,
and court dates have been given as far out as 2027 already. They may or may not be able to
work during that period, and under the table work is getting harder and harder to find.
Even if they do find work, on less than minimum wage, it can be very
hard to save up $5,000 for a lawyer. And migrants who can't find non-profit help are at a significant
disadvantage when it comes to their asylum hearings. Again, private security contractors,
this time from Allied, were transporting migrants to the hotel and guarding it.
Like CBP, the private contractors who guard, transport, and incarcerate migrants all
rely on the broken immigration system to make money. Unlike CBP, the agents themselves aren't
well paid. $19 an hour is the going rate for Allied, not much higher than San Diego's $16.30
minimum wage. But the company itself is huge. It's the third largest private employer in North
America, after Walmart and Amazon.
Allied guards are at prisons,
airports, and shopping malls across America,
and it's alleged that some are underpaid,
insufficiently trained, and improperly
vetted. The company
grosses over $20 billion,
and its affiliates are frequent
political donors.
All across this story, you'll see this.
Allied security, ISS action
security, people smugglers, customs and border protection, contractors who build the wall pieces
and contractors who install the wall pieces, general atomics who sell CBP drones and the
American companies who sell the surveillance technology to the government. All these people
make money. But the poorest people in the world are the only
ones losing money, and sometimes their lives when they cross our southern border. Tomorrow,
we'll hear from some of the people who made no money, and look after the migrants,
and we'll continue to support them through the asylum process. Welcome. I'm Danny Thrill.
Won't you join me at the fire and dare enter?
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just so that we don't have a mile long line of cars.
We have trash bags, we have gloves,
we have things that we're bringing up there.
So we have cars that you can get all of that out of.
Once we pull over, we're also setting up a couple of pop-ups.
Hukumba, California is a tiny town.
You've probably never heard of it.
It's actually really charming. There's a hot spring and a gorgeous hotel, a few stores selling art,
trinkets, that kind of thing. There's a lovely lake fed by the spring. And on this sunbaked
morning, there are about 50 people outside an old petrol station, nervously pounding bottles of
water, applying sunscreen, and getting ready to head out to the desert to clear up the ad hoc
migrant camp that has held as many as 1,500 people out in the open when title 42 ended and border patrol made no plans to keep them anywhere
it was a diverse bunch of people hidden beneath sun hats there's an australian film producer who
was at a conference in orlando and booked a flight over a grad student painter the folks who were in
the hukumba hotel who organized this whole thing. They're friends from the hospitality industry in San Diego. There were students and mums and dads and about the entire population of
this tiny desert town. There were also two former international aid workers who own a tower where
you can look at the desert, which is actually a much cooler thing than it sounds. And there's also
a museum of boulders right next to it. You should probably check them out if you're in the area.
I spent the day helping out in Hukumba after the refugees, some of them in handcuffs,
had been taken by private contractors to be processed by CBP's Office of Field Operations.
We met at a petrol station in the middle of town. The space where the pumps should be was filled
with tons, and I do mean tons, of bottled water, masks, hand sanitiser and other necessary supplies.
When I'd arrived the night
before around 10pm, the eerie green and yellow lights reflecting from the roof had lit up the
pallets of water like some kind of giant lava lamp. Driving across the desert, the town looked
like it was glowing. The town certainly has had a bit of a glow up in the last few years.
Three business partners purchased the Okumba Hot Springs Hotel, a down-in-the-mouth
property that had once been a glamorous desert resort, and they've been restoring the place for
nearly two years. Inadvertently, they also purchased a lot of land and a few other run-down
buildings in the town that were sold as a lot with the hotel. It was in one of these buildings,
the old gas station, that they set up a de facto mutual aid hub almost overnight.
The hotel's not finished yet,
and they probably didn't make much progress on it during the week when they were feeding more than a thousand people in the desert. The town's lake, fed by a natural spring, an old bathhouse,
used to be attractions. Today, the bathhouse's roof has fallen off, but it still makes a pretty
cool concert venue, and the whole town offers commanding views of the border wall which
sadly is only a couple of hundred yards from the main street. When I arrived in Hukumba everything
was closed. The mini mart was sold out, the hotel was still being worked on and the hotel kitchen
was churning out food for volunteers at the cleanup effort. I asked Marissa, one of the
volunteers I met that day, about her first impressions on arriving at the meeting point.
Marissa, one of the volunteers I met that day,
about her first impressions on arriving at the meeting point.
I was incredibly impressed by what the people of Hakumba and the hotel group of individuals that have organized this,
I couldn't believe seeing their donation depot in that old car wash,
just how well organized everything was,
and that they provided so much for the volunteers and and that
just the level of love and compassion and was yeah it was an amazing opportunity to be part of very
humbling i've been there since late the night before after visiting border crossings in california
and arizona and jeff one of the co-owners of the hotel kindly let me pull up my truck in some desert
behind his house.
Now, I'm a person who enjoys sleeping outside, and I do it as often as I can.
I try and camp at least once a month.
But that night, I was cold, even underneath my down blanket.
And I couldn't help but think of how desperate it must have been to spend nearly a week out there with nothing but a Mylar space blanket and some thorny bushes to keep you warm.
It's certainly not the welcome that one would expect from the richest nation on earth,
which had three years to repair for the day Title 42 ended.
To get a bit of background on the town, I spoke to Natalie.
So the previous owner bought it at an auction,
and I don't think that the previous owner didn't realize how much he was getting,
and he kind of just like neglected a bunch of it, you know, and then he was older.
And so he finally sold off the hotel.
He thought it was just buying the hotel, but he was buying all the land as well.
So when they bought the hotel, they acquired all the land.
And they're actually putting money into it and fixing everything up, which is really wonderful.
The hotel and lake in Hot Spring really are wonderful.
But the scene that had played out there on the 11th of may with anything but within a short period of time more
than a thousand people of all ages and nationalities will be held in the open desert and left to fend
lardy for themselves i'll let natalie describe the space they're in um there's lots of cactuses
everywhere so that's environmental like watch out where you're walking um that it's hot it's hot in the day and
really cold at night because it's the high desert um there can be gusts of wind that can just take
over get dust in your eyes um your hair everything's just you're just filthy i don't lack
of food i mean there's no resources you're in the middle of nowhere i've talked to a lot of the
volunteers many of whom have been in the desert for nearly a week.
They'd first been made aware of the impending humanitarian crisis late on Thursday night,
but one of the people working on the renovation of the Hot Springs Hotel got a call about it.
Within a few hours, the hotel's owners and all their staff were running what became
very nearly the only source of food, shelter and water for more than a thousand people
trapped and held in the desert by CBP. I spoke to Sam, another volunteer, to get a sense of the response.
Now Sam is the kind of guy who just looks like he's at home in the desert. His wide-brim hat,
boots and long-sleeved shirt and pants told me he'd spent plenty of days under the baking sun
out here. And his readiness with an isopropyl alcohol spray to disinfect people's boots after walking in an area that was likely covered in human
shit told me he'd been around one or two situations like this in the past.
I spent a great deal of my life as his second career working in developmental relief logistics
in Southeast Asia, mainly working with large organizations, for example, World Food Program, Doctors Without
Borders, UNICEF, many, many different places. In the context of that kind of experience,
it's easy to understand why people come to the United States. But I asked Sam to put the situation
here into perspective for me. It's understandable that folks came to the US, but why to a tiny
desert town of 500 people?
These people were radically unprepared for what they were going to go through because they were sold a bill of goods by coyotes on the other side about what was going to happen to them.
You understand? So they had really no idea what they were getting into at all.
And so there was not anything in the way of life-threatening situations
for any of those people in any meaningful way.
A great deal of discomfort.
It could have turned very badly if these people here had not stepped up
because the border patrol was completely overwhelmed.
And so there was never that bad of a situation here
compared to what I have seen in other places in the past.
As Sam pointed out, the migrants were now gone, but we were still surrounded by tons of supplies.
But at the time, there was no way of knowing the scope or scale of the need.
People reacted as best they could.
Actually, it was overkill, but you had no way of knowing at the time.
There's just no way to know. How do you know ahead of time?
You always ask for as much as you can get because why would you not?
I mean, you never know.
You don't know how many children with babies are on the other side of that wall right now.
Might be zero, might be 500.
You have no idea.
Before anyone knew how or if this was going to end, or really what even was going on,
dozens of people across the county decided to help.
One of them was Katie.
Here she is describing some of the volunteers she worked alongside there was a hodgepodge of people and
as volunteers and leading it were um some of the owners of a hotel out there and that was the main organizers but who showed up were people from the town
um people that I knew and recognized um there was some really devout like they're 24 hours a day
and then there were some coming in and out but I met people from all over the county um and most of them answered the call through instagram of the
hotel all those volunteers called their friends who called their friends who gradually coordinated
response natalie first became aware of this as many volunteers did through an instagram post by
melissa another of the three co-owners of the kumba Hotel on Thursday night, just as Title 42 was ending. Natalie saw the post and decided to help. At first, she wanted to leave
right then, at 1am, as soon as she'd seen the post. But after consulting her family, she decided
to make her own post, asking for people to bring supplies that were needed. Soon, she was overwhelmed
by the response. Yeah, I mean, immediately, even at one in the morning i was getting messages
because i posted it that's when i posted the story um i i immediately got messages from friends
saying i'll bring a blanket over um what's your address um yeah everyone just kind of rallied and
started bringing supplies over collecting money as well um some friends started collecting money as well. Some friends started collecting money and then bought stuff and
brought loads of food and things to my house. Her husband ferried the supplies to Okumba,
where they were joined by donations from all over the county and the old petrol station.
Like Natalie, Katie also saw a post and immediately felt compelled to help.
She called a friend and some members of her family and set about raising funds and buying supplies.
So I met my friend at a cafe, and in the meantime,
and I don't know how much of this is really important.
This is great. Just keep going.
So in the meantime, I text my mother and my two sisters
who live on the East Coast, and it was late at night for them.
And I just said, I would in prayer or intention and thought reality. And some of it was
just because I felt so touched, like praying for the community that I love too and um the next thing I know like my Venmo was blowing up and
there was a thousand dollars in my Venmo sent from my family members and so by the time my
friend arrived we were like let's go and we um filled our car with, amazingly, we found organic.
There's a grocery outlet, right?
So we found organic soup for a dollar something, a can.
And we spent a few hundred dollars.
And the next morning, we met early.
And we stopped in El Cajon on on the way and we spent all the rest on
we went to three or four thrift stores and bought every blanket and hat and baby carrier because
we have both focused on motherhood in our careers. I asked people I spoke to about a week later how the experience had impacted them.
It was overwhelming.
Just the way the community really came around
and supported the people in Hukumba
that were trying to help.
After we finished cleaning up,
when we were back at the gas station, the Amazon driver was delivering, like, I think he delivered 350 boxes.
And so we had to open them up and sort them.
And it was, there was so much food.
I think that it was an insane amount of food.
And it was awesome.
It was really cool just to see how many people
stepped up and donated.
Unlike some of the people I saw in San Ysidro,
Natalie, Katie, Sam and Marissa
are not part of an NGO or a mutual aid collective.
They're just people who wanted to help.
And that describes most of the people in Hukumba, although some of them did have previous and
regular volunteer experience with excellent groups like Border Kindness.
I asked Katie to reflect on the mutual aid approach and the absence of massive multi-million
dollar organizations.
Yeah, the Red Cross wasn't there, right?
No, they weren't there.
We were told that the Red Cross couldn't come unless Border Patrol called, and Border Patrol told us that they weren't allowed to call the Red Cross.
The one institution that did show support to people in Hukumba
was one that you might not expect,
given the support for this cruel immigration policy by almost all the Democrats in D.C.
But things are different when you can see the results of these policies with your own eyes.
Perhaps that's why I didn't see a single elected official in my entire week at the border.
But one person I missed, but who everyone mentioned,
was a lady who worked for California Senator Steve Padilla.
I won't name her, as I don't have her permission,
but hopefully one day soon we'll be able to interview her.
I'll let Katie describe the role this woman played.
There was someone from Steve Padilla's team,
and that's the woman I rode with.
And she was incredible.
Her brother-in-law is the chef at the hotel.
So I think, I mean, she might have came anyway,
but she came faster.
And there was true connection and she stood up
to the border patrol and said you know said we're allowed we're here on behalf of this senator
so I mean I saw some like head-to-head like arguments about our right to be there and most of us didn't weren't paying
attention to that we were paying attention to the people that we were you know around and no one that
was out there what didn't believe that we should be out there and that more help should be out there. Sadly, part of that familiarity with the system
this woman brought to the team also meant a familiarity with the cruel and arbitrary nature
of it. Katie says that they had to organize for that as well. So my friend and I, we ended up truck so in Steve Padilla's Senator Padilla's um assistance truck so we had the opportunity to ask
some questions that probably everyone out there wanted to know including the migrants
and it was like what will happen and um what's the process from here?
And how do you know that these people are being tended to?
And I literally heard her on the phone getting as many bodies on the ground to start going to those centers where they're being taken to make sure that we would follow them through the entire
process as best possible
monitoring that they were
well cared for as well cared for as possible
in a system and a
process like that.
Yeah.
But she literally said they're going to be
bussed off and put in cages.
And that they would do their best
to make sure that
no one was split up
and that everyone was fed,
showered,
and they weren't allowed to bring anything with them.
So a lot of the cleanup was all of the things that everyone donated that had to be left behind, including some of the stuffed animals.
For all the volunteers I spoke to, the chance to be of service was empowering.
Here's Natalie discussing that.
Yeah, I mean, well, like in so many times you like feel overwhelmed
with like so much suffering in this world and like what can one person do, you know?
And so it did feel good that to actually see an immediate impact like I'm doing
this and this is the result because sometimes you can just get discouraged you know like we're just
one person what can we really do and can we really make an impact and just seeing that and being able
to see directly how that one person can impact, you know, can rally. Like the scene how
my friends came together, you know, went shopping, bought things, gathered money, collected money.
You know, my really good friend, Sam, she went to her local bar after she collected a bunch of money,
went and dropped stuff, supplies off at my house. She was just down at her local bar and just chatting with them and like,
Oh, what'd you do today? And so she told them, Oh,
I collected money and I bought supplies and there were the people,
she ended up collecting about 200 more dollars at the bar from people hearing
her story. And so then the next day she went and bought more supplies and,
um, she actually ended up driving them out herself.
She ended up doing like three drips just from her own talking to people and collecting.
So just like the little impact that, you know, everyone just kind of coming together and making a difference.
In San Isidro, a pretty diverse range of San Diegans came to help.
On the first night, I personally left at about one in the morning after spending almost two hours trying to leave but needing to get charged phones back to their owners by
loudly in Spanish and French then English describing the backgrounds on the phone or It wasn't a great system, and by the weekend, Kaber and others had seen that more help and
organization was needed, and they decided to plan a response.
Here's Kaber describing how they prepared for that.
Yeah, yeah, we met up at a Target near my area because I had already thought that maybe I'll just grab some.
I was paying attention to people I knew who were doing aid and what supplies they were saying was needed.
The particular store near me has like a wall of travel size, like these giant tubs where you can basically just scoop out 100 deodorant cans and toothpaste and things like that.
Kepa met up with some other members of a local mutual aid group. where you can basically just scoop out 100 deodorant cans and toothpaste and things like that.
Caper met up with some other members of a local mutual aid group.
I'll make sure to include donation links for all the groups I've mentioned at the end of this series,
so please make sure to listen right through to the end. I met up with him, and he had just received the election donations through mutual aid networks,
so we know even more of the travel size.
networks so we um we know even more of the travel size i got some tooth hygiene kits and deodorant and uh and a bunch of trends and papers uh because because the kids that are between the walls um
don't really have um much to do uh unfortunately so so those were those went really fast um and
so we got a whole bunch of bags of all those kinds of supplies,
and then we dropped down to the border from there.
By the time they arrived, various organizations had organized areas along the wall
for different kinds of aid to be passed through.
Everything from clothes to food to medical supplies and toilet paper was piled up and given out.
People would show up for donations and organize the toilet paper, food, everything like that.
And people would just come up to the wall.
And if their family needed something, they would just kind of point to it and ask us
if we were able to, you know, if there was a common language there.
So, yeah, we just kind of, you know, gave things as people needed them.
I know that I helped give out some of the crayons and pads of paper.
And those were a big hit.
helped give out some of the crayons and pads of paper and those were a big hit.
Tons of kids all came running over from all the parts of the camp when they heard that there were toys being given out.
So it was heartbreaking, but it made me smile too.
Seeing them smile made me smile.
Because of the need to use CBP1 and of course the need to stay in touch with families back home,
there was a constant and overwhelming demand for phone charging.
News reporters took phones back to charge in their cars.
Some people bought charge bricks and power strips,
and mutual aid groups wrote names on the back of the phones
using painter's tape and Sharpies
so they wouldn't get separated from their owners.
By the second day, it was a
better system, but on the first day it was chaos. I'll let Keba, who spent a whole day charging
phones, describe the system that volunteers came up with to mitigate that chaos a little bit.
And obviously they couldn't charge their phones if they're just in this kind of desert gap between
these walls that doesn't, you know, have any kind of amenities or anything.
So we had a system where they would pass a phone through and we would put a piece of tape on it
with their name and give them a piece of tape with their name, the same name, and then they would give
us, they came back a couple hours later, and give us the tape back and we'd match the names and the phone um and and that was it worked well enough i mean it was
still an extraordinarily chaotic process i mean we had we always had at least 100 phones um on our
side of the wallet at any given time um and and some people had um you know some people had some people had chargers, some people didn't some people had Android or Samsung
or old iPhones
and some people had wall adapters
and some people didn't have the wall AC adapters
so we kind of had to
every phone that came through was we had to find
a way to get it
daisy chained into the set of generators
that we had, which was do we have power strips
do we have the right cables
and do we have space on those cables?
And I think it was a bit of a puzzle the whole time.
The only part of it that really overwhelmed me was we did overload.
Someone brought a bunch of USB-C power strips, and we blew out one of them.
And so there was now eight phones attached to it
that I had to find new spaces for. And I was just like...
That was the only point where I was just frustrated by
this whole situation. In addition to the fact that
the phones that were plugged into that strip
had been charging for who knows how long,
since that thing short-circuited or whatever happened to it.
It was chaos, but it was a good natured chaos.
Over the several days that migrants were detained in the open with no shelter and inadequate sanitation
just about two miles from the discount mall where you can buy cheap Ralph Lauren shirts if that's your jam,
people showed up in ever-increasing numbers.
The American Friends Service Committee helped organize volunteers into groups
to distribute food, package up wet wipes, snacks, medicines,
give out tarps, and do just about anything else that they could,
or anything else that they could fit into Ziploc bags
that could be passed through gaps in the wall, at least.
People who had been immigrants themselves, or who were the the children of immigrants were notably numerous among the volunteers. I spoke to one of them.
My name is Lon Chai. I'm a part of Asian Solidarity Collective, a grassroots organization here in San
Diego. I've been coming over here since yesterday. I came here around five, six yesterday and then
I came back through here this
morning and been here since I got home at 12 last night and woke up, dropped my kid off and came
right back with more supplies. I've been reaching out to family, friends and community to help
donate supplies and things like that, food, whatever they may have. And I've pretty much
been driving around city and collecting from folks that can't make it so I can bring it down here myself.
So that's what I've been doing.
Lungcha explained to me why it was so important to show up.
My community, I'm pretty sure they're sympathetic to this because I'm a first generation Cambodian American here in the U.S.
And when my parents and my family fled their country,
they went through this as well.
So somebody somewhere came and provided the support,
provided the aid, the donations for them to be able to make it to America,
to cross over and able to provide out here for me growing up out here.
You know, so I just sympathize with it,
with the whole thing.
I mean, everybody should feel the same way
because somewhere down the line,
our families went through similar situations.
If you're not an indigenous,
then your family somewhere down the history
went through the same thing.
So, you know, everybody should have a heart for this
and be able to come down here
and donate or donate their time or supplies,
whatever the case
may be you know come out and help he also explained why he feels it's important to encourage empathy
for refugees well it's it's you have to you have to be keep in mind there's there's families out
here there's young children there's babies i mean it takes a lot for for for a mother to pick up her
infant child and to to leave where she's coming. So that just says a lot about what's going on,
where she's coming from, for her to trek and to go through this,
to sit out here in the cold and stuff.
Because if she would rather endure this and take the risk and the chances,
that means where she's coming from is not as, you know,
she's willing to take that risk.
Later that night, I saw an Afghan family come to help the other Afghan families.
Their kids talked to other Afghan kids separated by the border wall.
They passed crayons through the wall and coloring books.
And their little daughter asked her dad if she could give her watch
to the Afghan girl being held in the camp.
Her dad said, of course, I don't record or photograph people's children,
certainly not without asking.
And I wasn't about to interrupt them,
but it was a very sweet moment.
The father of the family
had worked in the Army Corps of Engineers.
He'd been to the border before
to build this section of the wall.
I didn't really need to ask him how it felt
to see folks stuck behind it,
but it said a lot that he and his family
had taken the time to drive down,
buy bags of supplies,
and then come face to face with the people who needed them and hand them had taken the time to drive down, buy bags of supplies, and then come
face to face with the people who needed them and hand them out. Like dozens of other folks, they
tried to pass whatever they could through little gaps in the wall to make someone's day a little
bit brighter. Another volunteer who we heard from yesterday came from a local group called Pana.
Hamira had been at the wall since five in the morning and it was getting on for 5pm when we
spoke. I normally ask people what they ate for breakfast wall since 5 in the morning and it was getting on for 5pm when we spoke.
I normally ask people what they ate for breakfast just to tune in the volume levels on my recorder a bit,
but I'm going to include it this time, just so you can see how long her day had been and how hard she'd been working.
Okay.
What do you want me to say? Is that good?
Tell me what you had for breakfast.
I don't remember anymore. French toast. French toast.
My name is Humaira Yousafi and I'm with the Partnership for the Advancement of New Americans, PANA,
an organization in San Diego that fights for the full inclusion of refugees and those who come from refugee-producing countries.
We spoke about the emergency that had kept her here all day.
So in terms of this morning, I mean, I was I was, you know, very concerned because there was an asylum seeker who had an emergency and was rushed out of this place where now, like, for example, where we are at right now is people who are being detained and the most inhumane way possible. This is going against CBP's own protocols and policies as to how they're being
detained with no, they're not giving them food, they're not giving them bathrooms, they're not
giving them basic, basic things that they need to survive. And so that's why the community is out
here today to do that. Sadly, not everyone who showed up at the makeshift detention facility was showing up in solidarity.
Local anti-migrant activist and blogger Roger Ogden showed up.
Now, Ogden might be familiar to some listeners due to his attempts to host what he called a Patriot Picnic
and his advocacy for the removal of the historic murals in Chicano Park.
Ogden organized gatherings in the park in 2017 and 2018,
and they resulted in a huge and overwhelming
community response to defend the park and this time Ogden decided to keep to himself but Natalie
ran into some people who weren't quite as shy about their opinions you know a lot of the people
in the community are you know lower income and you know they are struggling in their own struggle on their and so I know
you know maybe I don't know like for those people I don't know like
it's hard I don't know I mean towards the end like when I was walking to my car
um this man this man in a car like pulled up and he's like, excuse me, what's going on over there?
And I was like, oh, we're gathering, you know, supplies for the asylum seekers.
And then I, you know, like I, if you're from here, you kind of, or if you're in Hukumba, you kind of already knew what was going on.
And so him asking me that, I was kind of like, and then he just started laying into um I've had illegals you know have broken
into my house a few times why are you supporting illegals and I'm like we're trying to let like
make sure that people don't die and he just kept going off on me and so he you know his the whole
um everything all the talking points that people have about not allowing people to seek asylum here.
And so I just walked away.
Marisa didn't run into the same kind of vocal opposition,
but she said in her conversations and attempts to process everything she'd seen,
she ran into some of the sort of knee-jerk responses that people can only really make about immigration
when they haven't looked the cruelty that they're advocating for in the face.
It took me a little while to kind of work through
just how I felt about it on an emotional,
maybe spiritual level.
I, you know, I spoke with family and friends about it,
about my experience.
And it's difficult to, um, I found it
difficult to explain my experience because I don't know that somebody can really truly understand
that unless they've actually been out there and done it themselves. Um, because the arguments or their kind of debate, so to speak,
what they would come back at me with when I was sharing that is,
but we don't have enough food or housing to be able to support that many people coming in.
And I'm like, but we just had so many people and so much money put out there to
help in a very short amount of time look how many donations were donated how much money was
contributed in a short amount of time from not that many people I'm like obviously we do have
the money obviously we do have the food so where's the where's the breakdown like is it our system
that just doesn't
allow for that to happen? I don't know. And that that's where like, I don't,
I don't understand it enough, but I feel like it just made me realize that I, I don't know that
anybody that I spoke to afterward really understands it enough either because their
arguments or their defense and what they tried to share
on the opposite side of me going out there and supporting just felt like it was
just something to say you know and like what they what they hear from
the general media out there and they they also don't really they can't quite grasp it so they're
just kind of throwing something out there i guess is what what it felt like caber also ran into some
less than charitable san diegans this time down in san isidro yeah so um i guess the first part
is is why they might have or how they might have found us there um which is there's a local news organization in San Diego called KUSI,
which is kind of, I would describe as a local equivalent of something like One American News,
which is really unfortunate because we already have One American News here. But they are pretty well known for um kind of a lot of like misinformation um kind of scaremongering about
um and house people uh immigrants um vaccines and all that sort of sort of thing but with kind of a
local news sort of aesthetic to it um and they were as far as i could tell they were really the
only identifiable media that were there throughout the day. I read articles eventually that made me realize there were other
reporters there, but they weren't identifying themselves the way that Hadesite was.
But they had this one cameraman just shooting B-roll, I guess,
and he was walking to all the different parts of the wall and like all the different sort of stations for aid
and like trying to like really trying to
get as many faces as possible um you could kind of tell that that's like what he was doing um
everyone who i was around i was i was kind of you know oriented mostly with kind of like um
sort of like anarchist mutual aid uh people um and and you know when they saw the cable
side track they were like okay i'm going to get a mask on you know and when they saw the KUSI truck, they were like, OK, I'm going to get a mask on, you know. I'm still in 95 with me.
So I wore that and I had a slightly identifying logo on my sweatshirt, which I taped over so that, you know, that image wouldn't show up.
Now, KUSI have drifted further and further right since 2020, along with their relatively minuscule viewership.
These days, they engage in fake news culture war stuff,
like repeating the recent false accusations
that Target was making tuckable swimming costumes for kids,
or labelling everyone in the asylum process illegal immigrants.
It's sadly pretty standard for right-wing news organisations now.
Kaber thinks that some of the people who saw footage on KUSI,
or perhaps found the location posted on Ogden's blog, came down to the border.
Several hours later, that's when we started to see people coming by.
And we could tell that they weren't volunteers, because plenty of people who weren't even necessarily volunteering would drive by and say,
Hey, I just heard about it, and I brought a case of water.
And they'd bring the water, and then they drive away but the people
who are doing who are like here to i think you know kind of do some kind of intimidation where
uh you know they wouldn't approach directly they would just kind of get out of their um
exceptionally large suvs um and and just kind of just kind of watch um and they would kind of you
know get a little bit closer at a time and then you know a little bit closer um and kind of just kind of watch um and they would kind of you know get a little bit closer
at a time and then you know a little bit closer um and kind of whisper to each other and you know
pointed things and you know it's just kind of they're just watching um and you know they got
close enough that i could read their shirts um and and the shirts had a slogan that's associated with
um the christian nationalism slogan um so there's this whole
family it's kind of kind of sad that the kids were wearing shirts too um and and so i kind of um
yeah i figured out that that's what was going on and i never talked to them i didn't approach them
but i stood when i was you know getting closer and closer I kind of positioned myself in between the rest of the volunteers and
this group and just kind of, you know, didn't really stare at them, just kind of looked at them
and just made it clear with my body language that I knew what they were doing, like they weren't, you know, they weren't doing any kind of secret agent thing or whatever, like they were being
really, really obvious and I just stood and positioned
myself in a way that indicated that I know what you're doing and you're not going to get close,
you're not going to interfere with what we're doing here, you're not going to contact anyone or
troll anyone or whatever you want to do. And eventually one of the people who is either a
volunteer or worked for one of the NGOs can definitely tell there's something going on so she went over and had a conversation with them that I couldn't hear
and eventually they decided to leave and I think she was just kind of trying to be diplomatic but
just sort of like ask them if they wanted to help and if they don't want to help then you know
it could go be somewhere else I suppose. And it was, I mean, the sort of one
amusing part to call it that was that they apparently complained to this person about me
because they said that I had been watching them and I was racially profiling them because they were white. And I realize now that this is an alarmist interview,
but just for the listeners, I am very, very white myself.
I think it's important when we discuss volunteering
to honor how hard this kind of experience can be on people.
Obviously, the trauma associated with seeing people brutalized by the state and capital
is not the same as being brutalized by state and capital yourself,
but that doesn't mean it's easy. I askedalie to reflect a little on children's toys we found in
the shelter when we were cleaning up the camp like as a mom like i have my own children and it just
really it's emotional it's like it's just uh like i'm like who's, what child from this plane with this, you know, here in this space and, you know, that no child should be ever in, you know, an encampment like that.
Or it just no one should be living outside.
No one should be doing that.
But also it's like kind of like the humanity in a way like that, you know, even a child's going to play wherever a child's going to play.
but even a child's going to play wherever a child's going to play.
And that little toy of little,
hopefully it brought that kid some joy in that moment.
Was there a little piece of home or someone gave it to him or what?
It was, yeah, the reality.
It was like a person, like a little artifact of someone who was actually there,
like it was a little more tangible than you know a sock you know that's not it's not I'm not thinking oh who wore that sock but think of who who uh who was playing with that joy you
know was it a little boy a little girl how old were they did they bring it home are they missing
it when they saw and I saw they had that she needed people to clean up, I was like, okay. I took a day off of work and went out there and just felt overwhelming.
I mean, just one day of me working out there was really emotional.
I can't imagine how Melissa and all the people that were on the ground just dealing with it.
And I know they're struggling a little bit and just processing it all has been
really hard, you know, really hard.
It's just, it just, just how, how privileged we are, you know,
like no one leaves our country because they want to,
they leave because they have to, or they feel like they have to.
And, you know, it's, I mean,
it's respecting and honoring and understanding the privilege that you're in and not taking it for granted because it's very easy to
both Katie and Marissa said they don't really identify as political and that they wanted to
be there as people sometimes often politics can become a complicated game of numbers and
statistics, but it's important to remember that what this is really about is organizing in such
a way that we can take care of one another, and that the most important politics of all is the
politics of feeding hungry people and maybe bringing a sad child a stuffed animal. Here's
Katie talking about the community response. I think I'm a really compassionate person
and I'm not very political in the sense that I don't really participate.
My life and my community's life is solution-oriented.
So I saw that on a large scale.
Like when people come together, we create solutions.
And you don't wait for someone like the government to show up and fix it.
Because then people will die.
and fix it because then people will die.
You know, I mean, that's the reality is if that community didn't activate,
there would have been a lot of dead people in the desert.
Katie shared with me that she'd been having a difficult time,
feeling guilty for not having the language skills to do more and questing her own worthiness to be there helping.
But in the end, she she said she felt that what
she'd done was right and important i'll leave you with her thoughts and tomorrow i'll be back to
talk about the people who put everyone in this situation in the first place the department of
homeland security um i think an important thing is like so many times we hear about things and we say isn't that awful and we kind of shut down
because we don't feel empowered or we don't know how to help and literally a smile makes a difference a feeling of like i see you and you belong on this planet makes a difference
and you know little kids packing up canned goods and fruit snacks for other little kids
they didn't see those kids but when the adult said they're going to be so happy to
get that package they felt like they made a difference and those little girls are going to
grow up and not be afraid to step up and make a difference I think a lot of people think like
they can't do enough so they don't do anything and if we all just do a little bit or what you can
then I think we would see a very large impact. Hakumba is a town of 500 and they just fed Just fed thousands. Housed thousands. Clothed thousands.
Hugged and welcomed thousands of human beings.
And those people in that town don't have much access.
And they made a difference. and I was proud to be a part of that community
in the way that I'm on the fringe of it
and it made me want to be even more a part of it.
My feelings and intuition about that town
were confirmed by watching the simplest action make an incredible impact on real lives
and real people and that this beating hearts and breathe and we all share the same air in the
same water and we're all connected and when you make one little drip in the bucket it actually
does make a difference and i think that stops us sometimes when we think what we have isn't enough
to give. But when someone has nothing, what you have is more than what they can imagine.
Welcome. I'm Danny Thrill.
Won't you join me at the fire and dare enter?
Nocturnum, Tales from the Shadows, presented by iHeart and Sonora.
An anthology of modern-day horror stories inspired by the legends of Latin America.
From ghastly encounters with shapeshifters
to bone-chilling brushes with supernatural creatures.
I know you.
Take a trip and experience the horrors that have haunted Latin America since the beginning of time.
Listen to Nocturnal Tales from the Shadows
as part of my Cultura podcast network,
available on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Ed Zitron, host of the Better Offline podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. unhinged look at the underbelly of tech from an industry veteran with nothing to lose. This season, I'm going to be joined by everyone from Nobel-winning economists to leading journalists
in the field, and I'll be digging into why the products you love keep getting worse and naming
and shaming those responsible. Don't get me wrong, though. I love technology. I just hate the people
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The history of the border and its enforcement begins in 1492 with the colonization of what
would become known as the Americas.
It goes through the 1842 Mexican-American War,
an assail of indigenous peoples' lands without their knowledge or consent in the 1853 Gadsden Purchase,
and of course through the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act and numerous other explicit attempts to prevent non-white people from moving to the USA.
From there, it weaves its way through the Mexican Revolution
and the First World War's
German proposal to ally with Mexico to reclaim those territories it had lost in the decades
before. Then, the Border Patrol's story itself begins in May 1924, and in the 99 years since,
it has encompassed everything from David Duke to 9-11 in its journey to becoming the biggest
and least accountable law enforcement agency in the federal government.
People from the colonial periphery have always migrated to the metropole.
It's why a man called Fat Les singing a song about Vindaloo is basically my country's second
national anthem, and why every four years France accepts black French men onto its football team
before it returns to vilifying them in other forms of discourse. Migration to the United States is
no different. Climate change and US imperialism have destabilized
and impoverished nations from the Americas to Afghanistan, and driven people to the US border
looking for a better life. What's distinct about the US is how obsessed it has become with keeping
these people out, and enforcing the longest land borders in the world. But the US border is much
bigger than the land boundary between the USA and Mexico to the south, and Canada to the north. If you're listening to this in the United States, the chances are
that you live in the border enforcement zone. This swath of territory outside the constitution
has been established since the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 established that a
reasonable distance of the border would extend 100 air miles around the outline of the country.
of the border would extend 100 air miles around the outline of the country. Two-thirds of the US's population live within this zone. Washington DC, San Francisco, Chicago, New Orleans and Boston
are all within it and that means that CBP agents can search vehicles and vessels to look for
property that's in the country without the right documents. They can board public transportation
or set up interior checkpoints and stop,ate, and search citizens and non-citizens without the need for a warrant. Within 25 miles of the border,
they can enter your property, provided it's not a domicile. The Fourth Amendment, part of a
foundational bill of rights the US likes to tout as what makes it different from the rest of the
world, doesn't apply when you're near the border. An all-encompassing history of the border and its
enforcement is beyond the scope of this podcast. Even a history of the southwest border could take up a whole bookshelf. But we
will try and skim the high points here. Let's start with the Gadsden Purchase, when a party
of military surveyors first bumped into Tohono O'odham elders as they attempted to draw a line
dividing Tohono O'odham people from Tohono O'odham people. The southern border is no more obvious today than it was then,
and of course to the autumn it was and remains an aberration
that divides them from much of their ancestral and current homelands.
It has, over the years, seen violent enforcement on members of the nation,
and a growing encroachment of the border patrol into today's Tohono O'odham reservation,
which is the second largest in the USA,
but only represents a
fraction of the tribe's historical homeland. These surveyors were in the process of finalizing most
of the California and Arizona border, a border I drove most of in the days after Title 42.
The southern border, as it looks now, was largely shaped by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo,
in which Mexico lost 55% of its territory, including all of what is
today California, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Nevada, and parts of what is today Colorado,
Wyoming, Kansas, and Oklahoma. The Gadsden Purchase of 1853 added more of Southern Arizona
and New Mexico. The specific border in San Ysidro was drawn so that San Diego Bay would fall to
north of the line. The border in Okumba seems more arbitrary,
a straight line in the desert that runs into a pile of rocks.
Of course, long before the border divided San Isidro from Tijuana,
this was Kumeyaay land, and despite the border it still is.
The name Tijuana derives from Tijuana, which means by the sea in Kumeyaay.
Despite this, the Kumeyaay and many other indigenous peoples were ignored when
the border crossed them, and it's becoming harder and harder for them to cross it. In parts of the
desert, it can be pretty hard to see the border at all. In 2020, while out with a group of Kumeyaay
people who are in ceremony to honour their ancestors, whose burial sites have been and
continue to be desecrated by border wall construction, I had to be wary of stepping
over it to better frame my shots. The emergency declaration Donald Trump made allowed wall
construction to sidestep legislation in place to protect archaeological and sacred sites,
but it didn't allow me to sidestep into Mexico to get a better shot. Luckily, BORTAC, a team of
armed border patrol agents who you might remember from Portland in 2020, provided a guy dressed like he was in the Battle of Fallujah to help me. I would say the border
is a line in the sand, but at the time there wasn't a line that was visible at all.
In Valley of the Moon, a few miles east of where that Bortec patrol guard shouted at
people for stepping too close in 2020, the border wall is about waist high, rusty and
essentially comprised of a single strand of barbed wire. In Hukumba, the 30-foot
Trump Wall pushes right up to a boulder pile, and then stops. The logic, as much as there can be any
logic in spending $25 million a mile to desecrate sacred spaces and defile the landscape, is that
people will be deterred from crossing by the harsh landscape, brutally hot days, and brutally cold
nights. This logic, of course, fails to consider
not just where people are going, but why they're leaving the places they've come from.
Risking one's life crossing the border makes sense only when one considers the danger that
many people in places around the world face every day. It hasn't always been this way.
For your reference, here are Reagan and Bush talking about migration in 1980. public schools free, or do you think that their parents should pay for their education?
Who are you addressing that to? I think you're first in this.
He was looking right at you. I said he was. Look, I'd like to see something done about the illegal alien problem that would be so sensitive and so understanding about labor needs and human needs
that that problem wouldn't come up. But today, if those people are here, I would reluctantly say
I think they would they would get whatever it is that they're you know
What the society is giving to their neighbors, but it has the problem has to be solved
The problem has to be solved because with as we have kind of made illegal
Some kinds of labor that I'd like to see legal, we're doing two things.
We're creating a whole society of really honorable, decent, family-loving people that are in violation of the law.
And secondly, we're exacerbating relations with Mexico.
The answer to your question is much more fundamental than whether they attend Houston schools, it seems to me.
I don't want to see a whole, if they're living here,
I don't want to see a whole, I think a six- and eight-year-old kids
being made, you know, one, totally uneducated
and made to feel that they're living with outside the law.
Let's address ourselves to the fundamentals.
These are good people, strong people.
Part of my family is a Mexican.
Can I add to that?
I think the time has come that the United States and our neighbors,
particularly our neighbor to the south,
should have a better understanding and a better relationship than we've ever had.
And I think that we haven't been sensitive enough to our size and our power.
They have a problem of 40 to 50 percent unemployment.
Now, this cannot continue without
the possibility arising with regard to that other country that we talked about, of Cuba
and what it is stirring up, of the possibility of trouble below the border and we could have
a very hostile and strange neighbor on our border. Rather than making them or talking
about putting up a fence, why don't we work out some recognition of our mutual problems,
make it possible for them to come here legally with a work permit,
and then while they're working and earning here, they pay taxes here.
And when they want to go back, they can go back,
and they can cross and open the border both ways
by understanding their problems.
The modern era of border enforcement began,
as far as we can pinpoint a single date, with Silvestre Reyes, the then sector chief of the border patrol in McAllen,
Texas, and his Operation Hold the Line. The community around McAllen had got tired of border
patrol snooping around businesses and even schools in the Rio Grande Valley, and instead, Reyes
deployed his agents forward in a sort of human fence along the Rio Grande.
Reyes would later become the chief of the El Paso sector and a democratic congressman. He lost his
seat to Beto O'Rourke in 2013, but this strategy would long outlive his career with Border Patrol.
The following year, on September 17, 1994, U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno announced the start of Operation Gatekeeper.
The first phase of the operation focused on the first five miles of the western border,
including the place where I recorded all those interviews you heard earlier this week.
According to a piece written a quarter of a century later in the LA Times,
the strategy was to deter migrants from illegally crossing in the first place,
and, for those who remained undeterred,
to encourage them to cross in more isolated wilderness areas to the east,
where they could be more easily captured.
There were already fences in 1994,
first a chain-link fence,
and then one made of helicopter landing mats left over from Vietnam
that had horizontal struts that closely resembled, and were used as, a ladder.
Anti-migrant rhetoric was already there too. California Governor Pete Wilson became an outspoken advocate
for Prop 187, a ballot measure that cut off state services like healthcare and education
to undocumented people. Here's a clip of Wilson's re-election ad.
They keep coming, two million illegal immigrants in California. The federal government won't stop them at the border, yet requires us to pay billions to take care of them.
Governor Pete Wilson sent the National Guard to help the Border Patrol, but that's not all.
For Californians who work hard, pay taxes, and obey the laws, I'm suing to force the federal government to control the border.
And I'm working to deny state services to illegal immigrants. Enough is enough. Governor Pete Wilson. Under the operation, a much higher number of
agents were deployed to the border. Apprehensions increased, and with them, so did funding for border
enforcement. It was around this time that the narrative around the border began to change.
It was also around this time, a few months earlier in fact,
that the US, Mexico, and Canada
entered into the North American Free Trade Agreement,
which made it easier than ever for capital to move across the border
and take advantage of lower wages in Mexico.
To learn a little bit more about Operation Gatekeeper,
I spoke to one of the agents who was tasked with executing it.
My name is Jen Budd, and I'm a former senior patrol agent
with the United States Border Patrol.
I was a senior intelligence agent as well at San Diego sector headquarters.
Jen has since left the Border Patrol,
but she realizes the impact of Operation Gatekeeper on migrants
was anything but positive.
Yeah, Operation Gatekeeper started in 1994, in October of 1994,
and I got to Campo in November of 1995.
And so right afterwards, in the fence, I was just getting to Tecate when I got there.
Most of my class, I think we had, I don't know, 40 people graduate or something.
Most of them went down to Imperial Beach.
And they had a wall there
and so that was the idea is to fill the san diego city area with as many agents and weapons and all
this and then that would push the traffic further out to the mountains making it more difficult for
them to cross and some of them would get injured and we knew some of them would die so it was
intentional the death and the injuries according according to management, would deter future
crosses. But of course, that's not the case. Alan Bursin, U.S. attorney in San Diego,
was named the so-called border czar by President Bill Clinton a few years later to implement that
same gatekeeper strategy across the rest of the southwest border. Bursin saw things a little
differently. Neither side claims it, but Gatekeeper was
probably the most important domestic achievement accomplished in a purely bipartisan manner through
three administrations, and the greatest accomplishment since President Eisenhower
and the Democrats put together the state highway system in the mid-1950s. But in fact, while
apprehensions did drop in San Diego, they spiked by 591% in the Tucson sector between 1992 and 2004.
The LA Times quotes the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service as saying,
One unintended consequence of this enforcement posture and the shift in migration patterns
has been an increase in the number of migrant deaths each year. On average, 200 migrants died each year in the early 1990s,
compared with 472 migrant deaths in 2005. Many of those deaths are now in a sector that encompasses
the O'Harnam Reservation. The desert there is particularly hard to cross, and the enforcement
that began with Operation Gatekeeper pushes more and more people onto the reservation.
The O'Harnam people used to travel between the United States and Mexico fairly easily,
on roads without checkpoints, to visit family, go to school, visit a doctor,
or perform their traditional ceremonial practices.
But after 9-11, the United States and its Border Patrol
began a more visible and violent occupation of the reservation.
It started with a vehicle barrier in 2007,
and it continued with CBP's quote-unquote virtual wall of surveillance technology,
cameras, and drones. The Israeli company Elbit Systems has built fixed surveillance towers,
which they pioneered in the West Bank on tribal land, with the permission of tribal council.
Meanwhile, other members of the nation strongly oppose the militarization of their homeland,
in the name of security of whatever homeland the Department of Homeland Security is securing.
I'll quote here from Todd Miller, whose excellent work on the border is required reading for anyone interested in the subject.
Amy Hwan and Nellie Jo David, members of the Tohono O'odham Hamadgum Rights Network, TOHRN,
David, members of the Tohon Autumn Hermajkum Rights Network, TOHRN, joined a delegation to the West Bank in October 2017, convened by the Palestinian organization Stop the War.
It was a relief, one says, to talk with people who understand our fears,
who are dealing with militarization and technology.
In 2017, Tohon Autumn Vice Chairman Verlon Jose said that a wall would be built, quote,
over my dead body. And the tribe released a video saying there is no autumn word for wall.
The 62 miles of the border on their reservation would remain without one, they said.
By 2020, the Trump administration had fought through a wall on much of the border using what
is known as the Roosevelt Reservation. This is a 60-foot-wide strip of land that the federal government owns along the border in
California, Arizona, and New Mexico. Although much of the Autumn Nation remains wall-free,
and some has what's called a vehicle barrier or a Normandy barrier, approximately one-third of the
Roosevelt Reservation is on tribal land. Since 2005's Real ID Act, environmental surveys and laws have been waived for border
security, and this gave the Trump administration a way to justify the destruction of autumn and
Kumeyaay burial grounds, saguaro cacti that the autumn see as relatives, and other sacred sites
along the border, despite efforts by tribal members and allies to stop the construction.
Members of the Tohono O'odham Nation have been pepper sprayed, beaten,
tailed and shot by Border Patrol. In 2002, a Border Patrol agent ran over and killed an O'odham
teenager. Last week, the same night I was waiting down by the border for the end of Title 42,
Border Patrol agents shot and killed Raymond Mattia, an O'odham man who had called and asked
him for help. He was shot 38
times, just two feet from his front door, according to his family. While Mr. Mattia's
death is still being investigated, the Border Patrol has a long tradition of literally getting
away with murder. This is because they investigate themselves, using so-called critical incident
teams. I talked to Jen about what those teams do.
And so what they would do is they would get there first on the scene,
because we would call them first. We wouldn't call anybody else. We'd call them first.
And then they come, they get rid of the witnesses. They set the scene up the way we want to be done. And they tell you the narrative that you're going to stick with.
You talk to your union reps, and it's all this giant cover-up.
Here's John Carlos Frey,
a journalist who covered CIT cover-ups, talking to Democracy Now! about how these teams work.
Within the actual agency of the U.S. Border Patrol, there is an investigative body called
SIT, the Critical Incident Team. They are tasked with investigating incidents that involve Border
Patrol, and it can be anything from a car accident to, in this case,
an individual who's killed at the hands of the U.S. Border Patrol.
In this particular case of Anastasio Hernandez Rojas,
Border Patrol agents deleted video.
They collected evidence at the scene.
They were present in the hospital when Anastasio was being treated.
They were present at the autopsy.
They fudged reports. They deleted
reports. They coached their own agents on what kind of testimony they were to give. They were
present at every one of the depositions. They made sure that they were the victims in this case.
When I say that, what I mean is that Border Patrol agents, sit team agents, make sure that Border Patrol agents are looked at as the victims in any sort of an incident, meaning that they are allowed then to use lethal force.
If a Border Patrol agent has rocks thrown at them or in the case of Anastasio, they allege that Anastasio was violent and that he was kicking and punching and he needed to be subdued.
If we take a look at the videotape, that's not actually what happened.
He's handcuffed.
He's prone on the ground.
His face is down.
Agents are on top of him.
But if you read the reports in this case that were prepared by SIP, Anastasio was a violent
man and needed to be subdued.
In 2021, Border Patrol was ordered to disband these teams.
But Jen says they simply moved them somewhere else and gave them a different name.
So then they said that they disbanded them because we brought the truth out and how they did all this.
And we proved it. But what they actually did is they did a retention.
So they had the Border Patrol agents resign from the Border Patrol and move over to CBP OPR and rehired them under there.
patrol and move over to cvp opr and rehired them under there so the team that likely went to go investigate the tohono o'odham killing uh i believe his name is matia matia raymond matia uh is likely
the border patrol sit teams so if the border patrol agents a lot of people don't understand
it's like a cult.
You know, they always say you bleed green, you know, and you don't go back from green.
And probably one of the few that ever left, you know, and tells the truth about it. Of course, the vast majority of people whose families will never find justice because of these CIT teams are not white.
And of course, Border Patrol has long rooted links to white nationalism.
not white. And of course, Border Patrol has long-rooted links to white nationalism.
In 1977, about 45 minutes from San Diego, and another 45 minutes from Macumba, David Duke,
grand dragon of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan at the time, announced the official beginning of Klan Border Watch. Duke claimed there were hundreds of Klansmen on the border, but local
newspapers of Desert Sun reported that there were, in reality, at least 10. I'll quote directly from the Desert Sun's reporting at the time here.
Duke said Klansmen would refrain from direct contact with illegal aliens.
If any are found, he said, Klansmen would not talk to them or contact them.
But if any illegal crossings are seen, they're going to use CB radios to relay the information
to Border Patrol, Duke said.
Duke, of Metairie, Louisiana, claimed the Klan has the support of the American people in helping the Border Patrol stem the influx of illegal aliens into this country.
He claimed the illegal aliens take jobs away from US citizens.
We feel this rising tide washing over our border is going to affect our culture,
he told reporters at the time, in a statement that wouldn't sound out of place on Fox News today. In response, more than
1,500 brown berries threatened to rally against Duke, and protests far outnumbering his patrols
popped up along the border. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Texas Knights of the KKK leader
Louis Beam, a Vietnam War veteran who had helped to organize and promote Duke's border stunt, established paramilitary camps around Texas, and trained children as
young as eight in the deadly guerrilla warfare tactics he learned overseas.
He rallied white fishermen against Vietnamese migrants and burned their boats.
In 2019, a border patrol agent from Nogales named Matthew Bowen was accused of knocking down a Guatemala man with his vehicle and then lying to a court about the incident.
The prosecutors in the case showed the jury text Bowen sent, including one which called migrants, quote,
disgusting subhuman shit unworthy of being kindling for a fire.
In several text messages, Bowen references, quote, tonks. This is a derogatory
term for border crossing migrants. The origins of the term are a little bit unclear, but it seems
to be derived from the sound of a flashlight hitting the back of someone's head. In an argument
against omitting the text, defense lawyer Sean Chapman wrote that he would argue certain terms
are, quote, commonplace throughout the border Patrol's Tucson sector. This is part of the agency's culture, and therefore it says nothing
about Mr. Bowen's mindset. Jen says this kind of language and attitude was not uncommon in her time
in Border Patrol, from the mid-90s to the early 2000s, but things have got worse since.
There have been some definite changes in the Border Patrol in the training from before 9-11 to after 9-11.
And what you also see, so their vocabulary has changed.
So like they refer to migrants and asylum seekers as invaders.
We never used that term prior to 9-11.
And we did have racist words that we used for them.
And I use them as well. I'm not denying that.
Of course, this kind of language isn't just restricted to Border Patrol.
The U.S. has become a dumping ground for everybody else's problems.
Thank you.
Thank you.
It's true.
And these are the best and the finest.
When Mexico sends its people, they're not sending their best.
They're not sending you.
They're not sending you.
They're sending people that have lots of problems.
And they're bringing those problems with us.
They're bringing drugs, they're bringing crime, they're rapists, and some, I assume, are good people.
There has been white supremacist violence at the border ever since Duke, and long before.
Often it's been at the hands of groups outside of the state.
Sometimes it's been at the hands of the state.
In Arizona, groups like Arizona Border Recon and Minutemen American Defense have terrorized border communities for decades
and gained renewed momentum from Trump's consistent demonization of migrants.
I spent a bit of time looking for them in the desert in Arizona last week, but I didn't see much.
Not that I really wanted to. Interaction with these militias, probably far more often than we have
documented evidence for, can be fatal, just like interaction with Customs and Border Protection.
Here's just one example, called from David Newart's excellent book, and how it followed with her.
On May 30th, 2009, Shauna Ford, Jason Eugene Bush, and Albert Gaxiola, all members of Ford's vigilante group
Minuteman American Defense, forced their way into Raul Flores Jr.'s home in Aravaica, Arizona,
by pretending to be Border Patrol agents. The group planned to steal and sell drugs they
thought Flores had in his house. The FBI knew about this, but did nothing to stop them.
Finding no drugs in the house, the vigilantes murdered Flores
and his nine-year-old daughter, Brisenia. Flores' wife and Brisenia's mother, Gina Marie Gonzalez,
were shot three times. She played dead, but when attackers returned, she exchanged fire with them
using her husband's handgun. In doing so, she hit Bush. Bush had previously been charged with
a September 1997 execution of an Aryan Nation associate
for the supposed crime of being a race traitor.
Both Ford and Bush are currently on death row in Arizona.
The KKK was not the only group recruiting children for border patrolling.
Since the mid-1980s, the Border Patrol's Explorer program has recruited young men and women of high school age.
The program is charted through Learning for Life, which is a subsidiary of the Scouts of America.
For kids, often the children of immigrants, living in border towns where industry has long since gone and a decent wage is hard to come by,
the program offers the chance at a starting salary of $62,000, twice the median income in some of these towns.
Young explorers will learn tracking, survival, shooting,
and how to detain and process undocumented migrants,
people who in some cases are walking in the footsteps of their own parents.
According to an article by Morley Music in The Nation,
young explorers have to earn the right to their uniform
by participating in a 60-hour basic explorer academy, at which they learn CPR, drills, and the methods of conducting vehicle
stops. It also offers courses in radio communications, public speaking, report writing,
and ethics and integrity, and introduces the youth to criminal juvenile immigration of Fourth
Amendment law. While I was writing this, I checked out the San Diego sector page,
which seems to show young people running, shooting, and one who looks like he's just
been maced in the face. The next photo on the Facebook page dedicated to this Border Patrol
sector shows a man in handcuffs. Above this is a video of someone dropping a child from the top
of the border fence. Without figures from the CBP, it's hard to tell if participation in the
Explorers has dropped as public awareness of family separation, assault, and other behavior doesn't exactly fit with the Border Patrol's
motto, honor first, has spread. I asked Jen for her take on the Explorer program.
Well, I call it Border Patrol youth because it reminds me a lot of the Hitler youth, where we
go into the high schools and we get the kids that are in trouble. And typically they are Latino dominant high schools.
And we teach them how to be mini border patrol agents.
And we teach them to hate somebody else instead of themselves.
We indoctrinate them into the same stuff that I was indoctrinated into.
But it's even gone so far now as to they do the dog and pony shows at the elementary school.
So they're getting them when they're like six, seven years old.
And they go there with, you know, a little Border Patrol bulletproof vest
and put them on them and take pictures and put it on social media.
And they have them sit in their tracks and turn the sirens on and all this other stuff.
That indoctrination is crucial to Border Patrol culture.
And to be honest, the reason I wanted to talk to Jen was to understand it better.
In Hukumba, I'd seen a young Border Patrol agent, a woman, giving volunteers rides. I'm not about to get into
a Border Patrol truck myself, and I wasn't going to get a response if I asked the agent how she
squared up her role in holding people in the desert with the fact that some volunteers said
she'd spent her own money buying supplies. Jen said that this kind of behavior can be pretty
common with young agents. I had intended to go to law school to be a civil rights attorney when I joined the border patrol.
And for me, I ignored my core values and ignored that I was enforcing laws that sent
thousands of human beings to their deaths. Because I felt like I was trying to survive.
I was raped in the academy by a fellow agent, and they covered that up. And I was really trying to get out of the South and start my life.
women in the border patrol ranks and they say oh it's because it's very hard it's not because it's very hard i mean it is very hard to get through but it's also it's because they're sexually
assaulting us all the time in the academy and harassing us so i go back and forth in my mind
and i would imagine this young woman you know she has days where she arrests some some pretty decent
criminals every now and then once in a blue moon but the majority of them um if she's paying attention and not completely self-absorbed she'll realize that that they're
not criminals and their family's just simply seeking asylum so she at some point has to decide
in her mind is this what i got into is this what i want to do with my life in the wake of 9-11
and quite tellingly the border patrol my life? In the wake of 9-11, and quite tellingly,
the Border Patrol moved from oversight by the Department of Justice
to the new Department of Homeland Security.
This move from justice to security has been echoed in its recruiting,
which once drew heavily on those with humanitarian aid experience,
and now tries to appeal to veterans of the two decades of war
that have accompanied the growth of DHS since 2001.
When the DHS was first established, the name struck many as problematic. In a 2002 article
in the New York Times, Elizabeth Becker wrote that the name had worrying similarities to the
way the Nazis talked about their fatherland, and it didn't really fit with the way Americans spoke.
Nobody in 2001 was talking about the homeland. But two decades and billions
of dollars later, it's hard to find much in the way of criticism of the agency in DC,
despite the fact that the 2022 budgets of CBP and ICE were $16 and $8 billion respectively,
and that every year since 2001, DHS has obtained more guns, more drones, and more surveillance
technology that is inevitably used to spy on citizens as well as non-citizens. In 1995, there were about 4,000 CBP agents. By 2020, there were 20,000,
with 17,000 stationed on the southern border. This is a slight drop from a peak of just over
21,000 under Obama, who is often called the deporter-in-chief for his fondness for expelling
people from the United States for crimes like having a pipe or financial misconduct, the so-called
aggravated felonies and crimes of moral turpitude that only exist for non-citizens.
These agents today have the ability to operate in what the ACLU calls a constitution-free
zone and can conduct suspicion-free searches of electronic devices, use cell site simulators
and sweep up data about thousands of people never accused of any crime. One of the more notable
examples of this happened only a few yards from where I was recording last week in San Ysidro.
It's a story worth recounting in detail because it brings together the themes we've spoken about
so far. Demonization of migrants, government overreach, and a frank disregard for
international and national law. In late 2018, I was enjoying a break from work in a caravan near
Ensenada. If you think back to that time, right before the midterms, you might remember some of
the rhetoric that circulated around a large group of migrants making their way to the southern
border. I'll play you some of the clips from Fox that NPR cut together in their coverage of the issue. The sympathetic, overwrought coverage of this invading horde is, you know, calling it a caravan is a misnomer.
And frankly, sickening.
Or sample the chipper morning show Fox and Friends.
I've gotten so many email from people who said, don't call it a caravan, call it an invasion.
Yes.
Is that fair?
Host Steve Doocy put the question to conservative
pundit Michelle Malkin. Of course it is. It is a full-scale invasion by a hostile force,
and it requires our president and our commander-in-chief to use any means necessary to
protect our sovereignty. CNN's Brian Stelter found that Fox News featured segments using the phrase
invasion more than 60 times this month about the migrants. On Fox Business Network,
Lou Dobbs' program invoked it dozens of times. Trump ordered 5,000 troops to the border. He tweeted yesterday, quote, this is an invasion of our country. And Trump has, without evidence,
claimed gang members and criminals and Middle Easterners are among them. Over on Fox, guests
have similarly, without supporting facts, suggested people from ISIS and the Taliban might be among those migrants.
Even so, the network's chief news anchor, Shepard Smith, tried to put on the brakes yesterday.
Tomorrow is one week before the midterm election, which is what all of this is about.
There is no invasion. No one's coming to get you. There's nothing at all to worry about.
This month, Fox hosts and guests have repeatedly questioned
whether the migrants might bring in infectious diseases.
Again, without evidence.
Laura Ingram.
We don't know what people have coming in here.
We have diseases in this country we haven't had for decades.
I'll leave you to process the incredible irony of the network
that killed a decent percentage of its viewers
by denying that COVID was serious or a, or that vaccines and masks were useful, panicking about infectious
diseases just two years before the pandemic began. The Tree of Life shooter, who we won't name here,
who is currently facing a death penalty trial for murdering 11 people in a Pittsburgh synagogue,
was obsessed with the caravan. The victims of the largest anti-Semitic mass murder in US history
included a beloved community doctor, a great-grandmother, and a couple who'd gotten married at the same synagogue more than 60 years earlier.
The shooter's last post on hate speech social media site Gab posted just minutes before the synagogue massacre began, spells it out, with a reference to the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, the Jewish non-profit that resettles refugees in the United States. Hi, I'd like to bring invaders to kill our people. I can't sit by and watch my people
get slaughtered. Screw your optics, I'm going in. The shooter was obsessed with the idea that a
caravan of migrants was not a group of people trying to save their own lives, but a coordinated
and somehow Jewish-led invasion, an attempt to demographically restructure the United States.
If you're wondering where he got that idea from, here's America's favorite job seeker,
Tucker Carlson, on the caravan. Over the past month, a caravan of Central American migrants
has gradually made its way up from Honduras through Mexico all the way to Tijuana, opposite
San Diego. At one point, Mexican authorities claimed they broke up the group, and American
media, of course, dutifully reported that they did.
But they didn't. That was just a PR gesture, and a temporary one.
In fact, during parts of the trip, Mexican police escorted the migrants northward.
In other words, the Mexican government abetted illegal immigration into this country,
as it has done for many years.
Well, tonight the caravan is on our southern border.
Rather than wait for the
crossing station in San Ysidro to open, many of them just jumped the fence. Some waved Honduran
flags when they got to the top. And that tells you everything. When you arrive in a country to
contribute to it and to assimilate into its culture, you don't wave the flag of a foreign
nation. That's what you do in triumph when you invade a country.
On my way home from Ensenada in 2018, I saw that, quote, invading horde in the Benito Juarez sports
complex, and promptly turned around and went back. My instinct as a journalist is to cover
things like this, but my instinct as a person is to help first. On the first day I was there
with two friends I know from the weird world of pro cycling, things were pretty bad.
We'd obtained a backpack full of Stroopwafels that a friend who makes Stroopwafels had given us.
Once we gave those out, I'd talk to a few people about what they needed.
We coordinated with mutual aid groups in Tijuana and offered to support however we could.
In the next few weeks, my friends and I spent tens of thousands of dollars at a Tijuana Costco,
received thousands of dollars in donations from people we hadn't seen in years,
and in one memorable instance rigged up a projector that someone had tactically obtained from an office to a DVD player which we'd installed in the roof of a dilapidated nightclub
full of little children and their mothers, so they could watch Beverly Hills Chihuahua and forget
about the fact that the country they were traveling to was portraying these little infants as invaders.
I have a lot of very complicated memories of those few weeks.
Little girls braiding my hair.
Little boys and girls trying to comprehend exactly how I could be this bad at football.
And people from San Diego churches, Tijuana anarchist kitchens,
and mutual aid groups around the region coming together to look after a group of people who'd been so heavily demonised
by folks who'd never met them or even been here.
Here's Trump defending calling the caravan an invasion and simultaneously explaining why migrants' low-wage labor is desirable for
people like him. Thank you, Mr. President. I wanted to challenge you on one of the statements
that you made in the tail end of the campaign in the midterms. Here we go. Well, if you don't
mind, Mr. President, that this caravan was an invasion. I consider it to be an invasion.
As you know, Mr. President, the caravan was not an invasion.
It's a group of migrants moving up from Central America towards the border with the U.S.
Thank you for telling me that. I appreciate it.
Why did you characterize it as such?
Because I consider it an invasion. You and I have a difference of opinion.
But do you think that you demonized immigrants in this election to try to keep...
No, not at all. I want them to come into the country,
but they have to come in legally. You know, they have to
come in, Jim, through a process. I want
it to be a process. And I want people
to come in. And we need the people.
Your campaign... Wait, wait. You know why
we need the people, don't you? Because we have
hundreds of companies moving in. We need
the people. Trump, as you
heard in the clip,
used the migrant caravan as a prop for his racist and bigoted midterm campaign.
It didn't work, and he lost control of the house.
But he did succeed in forcing these people to spend months in the cold,
first in a sports stadium, and then in an old nightclub.
Even as the migrants gradually reduced in number,
with many finding work and a new life in Mexico,
and some finding their way north,
the long legacy of that caravan was only just starting. In the months that followed,
journalists who'd covered the caravan, as well as those who offered assistance to caravan members,
said they felt they'd become targets of intense inspections and scrutiny by border officials.
I got pulled into secondary only once during this time, and that was entering Mexico.
The worst I got was a chance to inspect my 1980 pickup truck's oil pan. But for others, things weren't so easy. Homeland Security Investigation Special Agent turned whistleblower Wesley Peternak helped NBC to
document that. Under the umbrella of what was called Operation Secure Line, the Department
of Homeland Security created a database of activists, journalists, and social media
influencers tied to the migrant caravan. When they crossed the border, individuals in that database were often subjected to hours-long
screenings, and in some cases had flags placed on their passports. A PowerPoint slideshow which
Peternak leaked to NBC7 lists some of the people. Some of them have been guests on this show.
They include 10 journalists, 7 of whom are US citizens,
a US attorney, 48 people from the US and other countries who are labeled as organizers,
instigators, or having unknown roles. The target list also includes organizers from groups like
Border Angels and Pueblos en Fronteras. I asked journalist Brooke Benkowski to describe her
experience of increased border scrutiny in 2018.
If you don't have a pre-approved card, you have to go through, wait in line, wait in this long ass line.
And then you go and get vetted by CBP.
They ask you some questions or they just wave you through, depending on what kind of day they're having or whatever.
So in my case, I started getting pulled into secondary inspection more and more. So they would wave my car over and then take me into the secondary place where it's sort of like this back. It's like a
Quonset hut sort of. And in it, like all these cars drive in and out and they'll go through your
things. They'll get in your face, you know, they'll do all kinds of stuff. And I don't,
there have to be cameras in there somewhere, but I never seen any so i just kept getting pulled into secondary more and more as though i was a
suspicious person as though i was suspected of something and every time i asked they'd be like
i don't know it's just random ma'am ma'am it's just random so actually this started about 2014
for me um but it started to escalate in 2018 2017 2018 started to escalate and i was like
a trump administration of course it's going to escalate right under 2017 2018 started to escalate and I was like a Trump administration of course
it's going to escalate right under Trump she said things got worse from 2017 through 2018 it kind of
worked where I'd push back and I'd be like you need to let me fucking go um you know I'm century
I'm already pre-checked if you think that there's something wrong that I'm doing then take my
fucking century away and I want to talk to your manager type stuff right so I was doing that
that worked until 2018 and then it started to get really gnarly eventually things came to a head the
day before the migrants of the caravan were tear gassed and the scene most people remember from
2018 so um but on that that night as i was coming back um i drove through and i did the century
thing you know the usual stuff and got pulled into secondary. And this time it was really like gnarly. The time before that had also been really gnarly.
Like nobody hurt me, nobody did anything, but they got really close to my face,
like right in my face, you know, and started screaming at me, like screaming over me. And I
kept going, I'd like to speak to your manager, you know, sir, like, please, please get out of my face,
sir. And it was, it was gross. And they were going through my shit. And that was gross. Like they didn't find anything. But it was just an invasive, hostile, disgusting thing. And that
was when so I said, Can I speak to your manager? Which is a magic phrase when you're a middle-aged white woman. So I say this and they bring over some guy and he goes, ma'am,
can I help you? I'm like, yeah, what the fuck? You know,
why are you treating me this way? Uh, why, why did any of this happen?
And he goes, Oh yeah, um, I'm sorry. Your name's on a list somewhere.
You've been flagged. And I'm like, so every time I've crossed,
I've been flagged. And he's like, yeah. And yeah, you've been,
there's a flag on your passport or against your name.
And that's why.
And I said, well, why is there a flag against my name?
And he goes, I don't know.
You're going to have to do a Freedom of Information Act request or something.
I don't even know if he knew I was a journalist.
Sadly, Brooke last crossed in 2018.
And since I photographed those Kumeyaay folks in ceremony near Campo,
the border wall has only got longer.
Every mile it stretches out means another mile into the desert people have to walk
and that means that more people won't walk out of that desert.
Those people who lost their lives in an attempt to save them
are marked with little red dots on the various maps
that attempt to put the humanitarian crisis into a visual form.
Those dots begin in South America as people die traveling north, but they're
sparse and isolated. Where that changes is the places I've been driving all week. Eastern California,
Southern Arizona, places I know from years of hiking, climbing, and cycling. Places where one
mistake can be fatal. I know from my friends who spend time resupplying water caches and searching
for missing people that you don't have to make any mistakes to die in the desert,
especially if you're young or old or sick or afraid to ask for help.
These are the places we force people to travel through, on foot,
to come here and create a better future for themselves.
Dehydration, exposure and drowning all rank highly as causes of death along the border.
Last year saw a record for border deaths, and with Biden attempting to take a hard line going into 2024,
and climate change and instability continuing to drive migrants north,
to the place that causes so much of that climate change and instability,
there's no reason to believe things will get better.
I want to point to one tragic loss, one of thousands, that happened not far from where I live.
In February of 2020, Juana, Margarita and Paula Santos Arce were traveling by foot from Oaxaca
to their future in the United States, along a trail sometimes known as the Shrine Trail.
Their family told media back home that they were searching for El SueƱo Americano,
the American Dream. Along their route is a small
religious shrine, which marks the last point from which you can see Mexico. It's well inside the US,
along a dry creek bed in the Laguna Mountains. It can be hot in the summer and cold in the winter.
Last November I camped out there, and even with thousands of dollars in gear,
I was dangerously close to cold injury.
I've also rescued hikers with dehydration symptoms near here.
The desert and the weather might be part of the story. But the desert doesn't kill people on its own. It's the border that forces people deep into the desert that kills them. The desert is just a
tool for a system that uses death as a deterrent. When the girls crossed the border near Campo on
the 9th of February, it was raining. As they climbed the Laguna Mountains, it started to snow.
They huddled under a boulder for warmth, and the two men smuggling them across struck out to get
cell reception and call 911. By the time BORESTAR, Border Patrol's search, trauma, and rescue team
arrived, two of the girls had died. As they tried to save
Juana, their request for air support was declined, and she died with one of the agent's jackets
wrapped around her and another agent's beanie on her head. For some reason, the girls' remains
were not recovered right away, and they were not re-warmed. And so they lost their last chance at
the American dream, and not life. Today, their final resting place
is marked by three crosses and a cache of supplies, placed there by volunteers.
At the time I'm recording this, we don't know where all the folks we met at the border are now,
and we might never know. Not being able to follow stories is the sad part of this reporting
sometimes. Most people all have my phone number, but they might not anymore have their phones or the scrap of paper I wrote it on. Often these things can be taken for them
in custody. What we do know is that on May 18th, exactly one week after Title 42 ended,
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, also known as ICE, tweeted a video of Customs Enforcement
and Removal Operations agents walking down the corridor of a flight full
of masked people. The caption read, ICE conducted multiple removal flights including Ecuador,
Guatemala and Honduras as part of dozens flights conducted each week. On the wall of my office as
I write this, there are several propaganda posters from the Spanish Second Republic.
One is as simple as it is heartbreaking. The poster depicts a squadron of fascist bombers
and the dead body of a child.
The slogan underneath reads,
If you tolerate this, then your children will be next.
The poster was, of course, correct.
It was the inspiration for songs by The Clash and the Manning Street Preachers,
which are what in turn made me want to learn about the Spanish Civil War.
The slogan, coined in 1937, feels as relevant today as it does then.
It was one that folks on the border might as well have been screaming by 2018
but one that went ignored just as it did in 1937.
In 2020, folks began to realise what it meant
when Border Patrol drones circled the skies around Minneapolis
and cell phone signal interceptors tracked citizens all over the US when they came together to demand
that the police stop murdering people. It became more real in 2023 when under DeSantis, Florida
began the process of legalizing state kidnapping of trans and gender non-conforming kids from their
loving families. But that all began when the state ripped indigenous children from their families in
the 19th and 20th
centuries and tried to destroy their culture by punishing them for wearing their clothes speaking
their languages or using their names wasn't a big leap from there to trump's family separation
policy which detained kids on their own away from their families as a means of punishing and
deterring migrants and it's reached its obvious endpoint in Florida, because, despite all the people chanting about kids in cages in 2020, there's almost universal bipartisan agreement on treating
people of our southern border like humans without rights. And because for two decades,
we've allowed the border's surveillance industrial complex to grow to an unprecedented
and uncontrollable scale that watches us all. Changing things now will be very difficult.
DHS outnumbers many nations armies and it's
considerably better equipped but unless people show up and take action things are going to get
considerably worse regardless of who you vote for or what they say in order to get you to vote for
them as katie said little things can make a difference and if you listen this far i hope
you'll take the time to try and do those little things. Before we go, I want to update you on what's happened in the week we've been publishing
this. Although there are no longer people held out in the open in Hukumba and San Ysidro,
there are still many people trying to present themselves at the San Ysidro border to claim
asylum. Today I was told there are about a hundred of them. They're waiting there often for days.
Most of them are getting turned away.
They're all frustrated with CBP1, which continues to be buggy, offer no appointments, and struggle to photograph black faces. I also wanted to mention some of the organizations you can find
and donate to if you'd like to support their efforts. They are the Asian Solidarity Collective,
Al Otrolado, the American Friends Service Committee, Border Kindness, Borderlands Relief I'd also like to thank Joe Orellana.
His Twitter is at Joe or photo for his reporting,
which very much contributed to this series.
Hey,
we'll be back Monday with more episodes every week from now until the heat
death of the universe.
It could happen here as a production of cool zone media for more podcasts
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cool zone media.com or check us out on the I heart radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to learn more about our podcast from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonemedia.com, or check us out on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts. You can find sources for It Could Happen Here updated monthly at coolzonemedia.com slash sources. Thanks for listening. from the shadow join me danny trails and step into the flames of fright an anthology podcast
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