> “Any way you cut it, there are tens of thousands of children who have experienced parental detention since this president entered office,” said Tara Watson, a senior fellow at Brookings. “The majority are U.S. citizens,” she said.
> The researchers estimated that about 205,000 children have had a parent detained — typically a precursor to deportation — including about 145,000 who are citizens...

> The researchers said they considered 145,000 to be their most accurate estimate, and they predicted that it will grow, given that Congress allocated $45 billion in the One Big Beautiful Bill to expand detention capacity.
> Their estimate contrasts with figures released by D.H.S., which say the parents of about 60,000 U.S.-born children were arrested over the same time period. In their report, the researchers theorized the discrepancy was becauseD.H.S. was not consistently asking about children, or detainees were fearful of revealing they had children, worried about putting them or their caregivers at risk.

> “Almost every day we are contacted by a mom in detention who was arrested and taken from her kids,” said Ms. Revkin, whose group raises funds to help parents in detention pay for phone calls to their children. “This time the cruelty is often being inflicted on U.S.-citizen children.”
> The mother of Samantha Lopez, a 3-year-old U.S. citizen, was turned over to ICE last month by a sheriff’s deputy after a traffic stop while she was driving to her restaurant job, according to her husband.

> Ironically, having a U.S.-born child can keep families apart.
> Ms. Ordonez, who has been separated from her U.S.-born son for more than 10 months, said that she pleaded with agents long ago to allow the pair to stay in a family detention center while she fought her case. But American citizens cannot be held in immigration detention.

> Agents have warned Ms. Ordonez that her deportation is imminent, she said. To accompany his mother, Alonzo needs a passport. Ms. Ordonez has been struggling to arrange it, she added. Agents warned her recently that they would deport her without the boy if she did not obtain the document, leaving him with his current caretakers.
> “These aren’t family or anything, they are just caring for him as a favor,” she said, weeping. “If they deport me, I want to take my child.”

nytimes.com/2026/05/18/us/broo…

#ICEThugs #ICEThugDetentions #TheBrookings #USADeportations #USADeportationResearch
/HT #JeffreyStClair FB
@bsmall2

Brookings Institution Report: Over 100,000 Family Separations in Trump Crackdown

The Brookings Institution suggests that federal statistics are an undercount because immigrant parents are not being asked about or not disclosing their American children.

The New York Times
I've been reading the Haiti Trilogy by Madison Smartt Bell, but out of order. It might be good for the study of writing (Bell is also the author or Narrative Design) to read the books out of order. There are a lot of characters and it can be hard for to keep track of the African, Creole, and French names, like all those similar-seeming names in Lord of the Rings or other fantasy series books. I can see how making a lot of movies and "fanfic" about this trilogy could be great for more unified and accurate views of the world: especially USA foreign policy, immigrant-bashin and "typical Antony Blinken" lying in the course of his work as the Secretary of State for the USA.... At the end of the thrid book one character is sacrificed as "a fanatic" so that soldier in transformatin can save another character. Getting to the second book after the third one made me more sensitive to the creation of "a fanatic": even if the term was used by a character who probably didn't really feel that way about the scarred man...



.> Madison Smartt Bell, author of a three volume series on the Haitian Revolution that begins with the masterful All Souls’ Rising, (all souls being the English translation of Toussaint), wrote this about Toussaint’s end:


.> .> In fact, Toussaint survived a little more than seven months at the Fort de Joux. In the conclusion of his memoir he had written, with a certain insight into Napoleon’s plan for him: “Is it not to cut off someone’s legs and order him to walk? Is it not to cut out his tongue and tell him to talk? Is it not to bury a man alive?” No one wanted to make him a martyr. His bones were lost in a potter’s field, but his spirit, never to be suppressed, helped carry the Haitian Revolution to ultimate victory.


.> Speaking of Haitians being moved around the globe by nonHaitians: today, 61 Haitian migrants who were deported from the US to Haiti in the midst of the coronavirus outbreak here. Haiti had already closed its borders last month in hopes of preventing an outbreak of the virus, but the US was allowed to violate that with this deportation.


https://amywilentz.com/deportations-on-the-anniversary-of-toussaints-death/

#AmyWilentz #HaitiHistory #DeportationsToHaiti #USAdeportations #MadisonSmarttBell #HaitiTrilogy

#^Deportations on the Anniversary of Toussaint’s Death
It’s been 217 years since Toussaint died of cold, exposure, and neglect on April 7, 1803, at the Fort de Joux, on a high hilltop in the Doubs, France. He’d been arrested treacherously i…
Deportations on the Anniversary of Toussaint’s Death

It’s been 217 years since Toussaint died of cold, exposure, and neglect on April 7, 1803, at the Fort de Joux, on a high hilltop in the Doubs, France. He’d been arrested treacherously i…

Amy Wilentz