JustSecurity is a prime source for factual info related to National Security.

Here. Have a recent article about how the US ended up with kiddie koncentration 
kamps and why ICE is violating international law that protects refugees and 
asylum seekers in quite a few ways. You might actually learn something other 
than how to reactionary-ly fill a post with links.

"Since the first Democratic presidential debates at the end of June, 
candidates, pundits and former government officials have discussed whether 
provisions of law that turn unauthorized border crossing into the federal crime 
of “improper entry” – in addition to a civil immigration law violation – should 
be repealed.

The chair of the Republican National Committee characterized the proposal as a 
call for open borders. Some Obama administration officials have also argued 
against such proposals. Juliette Kayyem, a Department of Homeland Security 
(DHS) official during the Obama administration, asserted that Section 1325 was 
needed to protect borders and deport people. Sarah Saldaña, director of 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) during the Obama administration, 
urged the law should stay on the books as a “tool” in the “tool box.” Former 
DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson argued that decriminalizing unauthorized entry was 
tantamount to a declaration that our borders are open.

Much of the debate has unfortunately failed to make clear that, even without 
these criminal laws on the books, the border would still be guarded by Customs 
and Border Patrol (CBP) agents, drones, fencing and (some) wall, and people who 
cross the border without authorization would still be subject to the 
administrative system Congress created to address violations of U.S. 
immigration law. 

For example, they would still be taken into Border Patrol custody, put into the 
administrative deportation system’s proceedings, deported if they are not ruled 
eligible for asylum or other relief, and in the meantime held – often 
unnecessarily – in ICE detention facilities for weeks, months or longer. 

Other laws would still criminalize smuggling, trafficking and a wide range of 
other criminal conduct should a person who crossed the border have committed 
such crimes.

Also absent from much of the debate has been information on how laws that 
criminalize entry and reentry actually work in practice and how they have been 
used to punish asylum seekers and migrants in violation of due process and U.S. 
refugee treaty prohibitions – long before the Trump administration’s zero 
tolerance/family separation fiasco, and continuing to this day..."

https://www.justsecurity.org/64963/criminal-prosecutions-and-illegal-entry-a-deeper-dive/
-- Rr
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.

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