A couple of news stories released three weeks apart and taken separately, were cause for concern but not necessarily catastrophic. Taken together, however, they are just that.
At best, the two stories serve as an example of the seeming cluelessness of bureaucracy; at worst, they reveal the total lack of empathy for other human beings, people the Department of Homeland Security and ICE consider somehow less than human.
The first story, dated Jan. 20 of this year, carried the headline by POPULAR INFORMATION, “ICE has stopped paying for detainee medical treatment.” HEALTH LAW POLICY’Sheadline was similar: “Denying Medical Care to ICE Detainees: Treating Their Needs as Optional.” Even CBS NEWS, which has more or less acquiesced to Donald Trump’s attempts to silence news critics, managed to sneak in its own headline, albeit a day later than the others: “ICE stopped paying for detainee medical care as population surged, Ossoff investigation finds widespread neglect.”
Okay, that’s bad enough, right? Denying medical care is itself sick. Parents have gone to jail for withholding medical care from children.
But then, on Feb. 10, TRUTHOUT followed with this headline: “Illness is Rampant Among Children Trapped in ICE’s Massive Jail in Texas.”
Taken with the sudden reemergence of a measles outbreak among children as a result of Robert Kennedy’s insane vaccination policy and with the tripling of the rate of incarceration of children by ICE, we are flirting with disaster in case people like Trump and Kristi Noem give a damn. The spread of measles and flu do not recognize the boundaries of prison walls.
Thom Hartmann, in his book The Last American President, says roughly 1.5 to 4 percent of the general population makes up a subset who “lack the neurological or psychological ability to experience empathy.” These people, whom he described as being clinically described as sociopaths or psychopaths, account for roughly one-third of our prison populations, commit about 90 percent of the country’s violent crimes and—more significantly, account for about 21 percent of all corporate CEOs.
At first blush, it would appear that most, if not all, of the CEOs of private prisons contracted to DHS and the top brass at ICE and DHS might fall within that description. The man presently occupying the Oval Office certainly does The fact is, those who operate the private prisons just don’t seem to care about anything other than cramming as many people as possible into their facilities. That’s because they’re paid on the basis of the number of occupied beds. Empty beds mean no compensation. So, let’s fill those beds and if medical care can be withheld, the prison’s bottom line improves and stockholders are happy.
And detainees, for the most part, are out of sight, out of mind. And if ICE, DHS and prison CEOs don’t have to be held accountable for their care, and as long as the 73,000 detainees (that number figures to increase substantially as even more detainee centers are opened) remain silent and invisible to the outside world, who cares, right?






