History of Interment

Joyce Vance touches upon a scary topic. The government under Tr__p’s tutelage over our lives is taking a turn for the worst. Not happy with being a president governing a nation, his government is in the process of rounding up people that may not fit the classification of being citizens. Intermingled with them are children who were born in the United States. While the Tr__p administration says no adult US citizens are being departed, it is hard to imagine this not happening. There is little care being given to who is identified as being illegal.

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“The objective of this contract is to obtain all infrastructure, including temporary housing structures, physical plant, staffing, resources, services, and supplies necessary to house aliens in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in a safe and secure environment to effectuate their removal from the United States.” 

Revisiting America’s Dark History of Internment

During World War II, Americans were held at Fort Bliss in an uncomfortably small compound behind a double barbed wire fence overseen by guard towers. Internment is an ugly word. It refers to the confinement of people due to suspicions, based on nothing other than Japanese origin or ancestry, that they were a security threat after the attack on Pearl Harbor. They were never charged with a crime. They were not brought to trial and given an opportunity to defend themselves. They were incarcerated without due process.

Unsure, at first, of how to proceed, our government created makeshift camps with horrific conditions. One was at Santa Anita Park, a racetrack in Southern California, where entire families were forced to stay in horse stalls with dirt floors. Fort Bliss was one of the first facilities used to house people, with over 100 individuals held there. Ultimately, more than 125,000 people were forcibly removed from their homes, and people whom our government interned lost approximately $400 million in property. Reparations paid in later years did not come close to fully compensating people for their lost homes, businesses, and community, let alone the deprivation of rights they suffered.

Now, Donald Trump is doing it again. The Department of Homeland Security has constructed a large tent facility on the base at Fort Bliss for US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), making it the largest immigration detention site in the nation.

People who do not learn history’s lessons are doomed to repeat them.

Inconceivable is a word I have returned to again and again in these past few years.

In 1944, the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of internment in a case called Korematsu v. United States. That case has never been overturned, although in a case during the first Trump administration involving his Muslim ban, Chief Justice John Roberts called it “gravely wrong the day it was decided,” and said it should have “no place in law under the Constitution.”

ICE wants to conduct its Fort Bliss facility without any public scrutiny. The “Performance Work Statement” we started with makes that clear:

“There shall be no public disclosure regarding this contract made by the contractor (or any subcontractors) without review and approval of such disclosure by the ICE Office of Public Affairs. The government considers such information privileged or confidential. The contractor shall notify the COR when a member of the U.S. Congress or any media outlet requests information or makes a request to visit the facility. The contractor shall coordinate all public information related issues with the CO. All press statements and releases shall be cleared, in advance, with the ICE Office of Public Affairs.”

In other words, they want to make sure we don’t protest this facility. That we don’t demand accountability for it from our elected officials. That the kind of lawsuits that shut down Donald Trump’s “Alligator Alcatraz” don’t materialize here. We know what to do.

In moments like these, the threads between politics, law, and history matter more than ever. Understanding how they fit together helps you make sense of what’s really happening.

We’re in this together,

Joyce