“Lost children, children over there with parents over here, and basically broken families. I am one of them. My family is there. They stayed. I have not seen my son in seven years. By chance one day I saw my son using the internet, and he asked, [English] "Yo, Daddy, when are you going to get back?" I say, "I'm sorry, Son. I can't right now." [subtitled transl.] Why? Because I can't. Why not? I have no response for him.”

Pedro, an immigrant from Honduras who was deported and separated from his family because [edited] of deportation. From In Mexico City Protesters Denounce Obama Deportations

“Before all of you Obama supporters start jumping for joy about his decision to stop deporting young illegal immigrants, remember that he's responsible for deportation records two years running. In 2010 he deported over 392,000 immigrants. In 2011 deported nearly 397,000. That averages out to 1,080 people per day. This is no coincidence as we creep toward the November election.”

libertarians.

Do We Have Enough Immigration Enforcement? These 9 Charts Will Give You an Idea

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By TED HESSON

A report came out on Monday showing that the U.S. spends more on immigration enforcement than all major federal criminal enforcement agencies combined.

The report, by the Migration Policy Institute, is 180 pages long, and is one of the broadest examinations of our immigration enforcement system to date.

Read More

Acuerdos en materia migratoria Spain-SenegaL

Se firmaron 4 acuerdos entre Espana & Senegal en la segunda mitad del 2006:

1. August 24, 2006. Memorandum de Entendimiento en materia de inmigracion irregular: deportaciones de senegaleses y admision de nacionales no senegaleses a senegal.

Este permite la presencia de las patrullas Frontex (aun que sean todas de

la guardia civil pero es Frontex que paga). Este acuerdo queda secreto, no se publica en el BOE,

pero es muy grave porque permite la presencia de la agencia europea en

territorio non europeo, con un papel de lucha a la emigracion illegal

(porque estan alli para que la gente no salga) que es contrario a

l’articulo 13 de la Declaracion universal de los derechos humanos que

dice que cualquiera puede abandonar su pays (luego ir en territorio

europeo es otra cosa y legislacion…pero alli estan para que no salgan,

que es muy grave). 

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“[H]uman beings matter little in the corporate state. We myopically serve the rapacious appetites of those dedicated to exploitation and maximizing profit. And our corporate masters view prisons—as they do education, health care and war—as a business. The 320-bed Elizabeth Detention Center, which houses only men, is run by one of the largest operators and owners of for-profit prisons in the country, Corrections Corporation of America. CCA, traded on the New York Stock Exchange, has annual revenues in excess of $1.7 billion. An average of 81,384 inmates are in its facilities on any one day. This is a greater number, the American Civil Liberties Union points out in a 2011 report, 'Banking on Bondage: Private Prisons and Mass Incarceration,' than that held by the states of New York and New Jersey combined. The for-profit prisons and their lobbyists in Washington and state capitals have successfully blocked immigration reform, have prevented a challenge to our draconian drug laws and are pushing through tougher detention policies. Locking up more and more human beings is the bedrock of the industry’s profits. These corporations are the engines behind the explosion of our prison system. They are the reason we have spent $300 billion on new prisons since 1980. They are also the reason serious reform is impossible.”

—Chris Hedges, Profiting From Human Misery
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