Wednesday, October 17, 2018
How to Make a Terrible Situation Much, Much Worse
A
caravan of about four thousand desperate migrants is making its way through
Central America and heading for the U.S. border. They are native Hondurans,
running from dire poverty, political repression, corruption, but mostly
violence rather directly attributable to gangs and their overlords, the
ever-dangerous drug cartels. Economic migrants and asylum-seekers.
As
the trail of busses and on-foot escapees move northward, it is necessary to
note that not only is the demand for illicit narcotics from American users the
hard dollar enabler of their misery,
that our support of a repressive regime only makes it worse, but
smuggled guns, purchased legally at US gun shows and private sales, insure that
gangs and cartels have the best and most effective assault rifles and
high-capacity handguns to ply their evil trade.
A
gaggle of American reporters are tagging along, collecting stories that tug at
heart strings. For most, it is a bitter economic escape. There are absolutely
no jobs, no economic opportunities in their home country. For others, it is the
violence. Gangs, selling “protection” to slum-dwellers with no access to cash,
threaten (and often follow up on their threats) to kill children unless that
extortion money is paid. Drug cartels enlist unemployed youth into shortened
lives and deadly risks. Government intolerance for dissent is legendary as
well. “We are not leaving because we want to” is a common refrain.
But
Donald Trump’s heartless policies for such migrants, separating children from
their families and creating massive makeshift “detention centers,” have already
pulled mostly hardworking undocumented residents from rather normal and
otherwise productive lives within the US, leaving unharvested crops rotting in
the fields, construction sites undermanned, and many businesses (take slaughter
houses for example) unable to find American replacements at any price. But GOP
priorities – hardliners backed by Trump making sure there are no compromises,
no DACA (Dreamer) relief – insure that there will be no attempt to implement a
sensible immigration policy. Administration after administration has failed to implement
any reasonable attempt at immigration reform.
As
Trump implements the highest level of enforcement of any prior US president –
his zero-tolerance policy – not only does the world see how heartless we have
become, but we are even blocking visas to hi-tech, STEM workers desperately
needed in the biggest good-job-creating industries, effectively cutting off our
own nose to spite our face. Trump’s latest tweet-threats let Honduran President
Juan Orlando Hernandez know that if somehow the Honduran government cannot stop
that caravan – which is no longer even in Honduras – Trump will cause that
government – and its people – pain.
The
tweet: ““The United States has strongly informed the President of Honduras that
if the large Caravan of people heading to the U.S. is not stopped and brought
back to Honduras, no more money or aid will be given to Honduras, effective
immediately!”
If
somehow Trump were able to make good on that threat, even the beneficial side
of local police power (which relies heavily on US support) would be seriously
diminished, placing local Hondurans at further risk. Hopelessness and
desperation would explode to even more dire extremes. It is obvious that this
“punishment” will not exactly induce more Hondurans to stay in their
decreasingly tolerable homeland. It would surely make more even Hondurans want
to make the trip northward. And then there are a few issues with pragmatics.
“It
was unclear how Trump expected Honduras to stop the caravan. Hernandez did not
immediately respond to Trump’s tweet.
“The
U.S. gave Honduras more than $180 million in aid in 2017 for a range of
programs designed to improve security and combat poverty and drug trafficking,
according to the Washington Office on Latin America think tank. Those funds are
appropriated by Congress.
“It
was also unclear how Guatemala would respond to the caravan. Guatemalan
President Jimmy Morales, who is seeking U.S. support in his efforts to shut
down a U.N.-backed anti-corruption body that is investigating him and several
family members, has sought to curry favor with Trump…
“In
April, another caravan that originated in Honduras provoked a series of tweets
from Trump, who said the participants posed a threat, and he sent National
Guard troops to the border in response. Many participants of that caravan,
which included large numbers of women and children, eventually turned
themselves over to border authorities and asked for political asylum.
“Similar
caravans were organized in previous years but traveled largely without
interference by authorities. The caravans are designed to help protect
immigrants from the dangers of the migrant trail, which include robberies,
rapes and assaults perpetrated by smugglers, cartel members and even
immigration and law enforcement authorities.” Los Angeles Times, October 17th.
Smugglers
are known to be unreliable and expensive, so to many long-since contemplating
the journey, a caravan is cheaper and vastly more secure. Many hope they can
find opportunities en route, without having to challenge the US border and it
hostile reception policies. To Hondurans, even job-plagued Mexico is a relative
mecca of opportunity. Even as Mexico throws hundreds of additional forces to
its border with Guatamala.
Some
even point to a commonly-held belief that US interference in recent Honduran
elections caused a spike in government repression, which in turn created an
impetus for those subject to the crackdown to leave the country: “[One migrant
interviewed] blames Trump and the U.S. government in part for the recent exodus
from Honduras in connection with the contested reelection of Hernandez in
November.
“Initial
election results showed opposition challenger Salvador Nasralla with a
5-percentage-point lead over Hernandez. Then the electronic results system went
down for hours. When it came back online, Nasralla’s lead had disappeared in
favor of Hernandez, whose claim to victory set off months of opposition
protests and violent crackdowns by the government.
“Despite
claims of election irregularities and calls for new elections by the
Organization of American States and others, the U.S. recognized Hernandez as
the winner… ‘The U.S. gave the green light for this government,’ [the
interviewee] said.” LA Times. Ever get the impression that our government
really doesn’t know what it is doing, that their short-term compliance with sloganeering
campaign promises to the base often becomes a showcase for the law of
unintended consequences? What’s next in the not-so-mythical Trumpland? How
about the trade war, a gift that will just keep on giving!!! Argh! Like the
massive deficit from the tax cut that was supposed to pay for itself?
Incompetence never ends.
I’m Peter Dekom, and it is not enough
that we have abandoned all pretense of adhering to moral high ground, even the
New Testament pillars of evangelical faith, we have to produce polices
under-deliver or create precisely the opposite result to our stated goals.
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