I must confess I am discouraged by the alarming countercurrent in US discourse, pushing back on the idea that "Alligator Alcatraz" is an "actual" concentration camp.
-
@david_chisnall @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes
It might have been more efficient to go into the neighborhoods of the people they want to eliminate and simply shoot them in their homes. But, even hard-liners can see the "optics" of such an action would be unpalatable.
@futurebird @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes
The Nazis didn't do that even after they'd built their death camps, for two reasons.
First, shooting people isn't actually that cheap. You still need to dispose of the bodies. Killing a load of people in the same place makes it easier put them in mass graves.
Second, if you shoot people in the streets then, as you say, the optics are bad, but that matters for two reasons. People will be more likely to resist if they know that the alternative is death, and people are more likely to help people they know will die without help. If you keep up the fiction that they're 'just' being relocated, you can persuade a large portion of the population to not help them and convince them that resisting to the point of being shot is not worth it.
If you want to systematically exterminate people, letting them know that's what you're doing makes it harder, and having to do it where they are is expensive. Some of this has probably changed since the 1930s, because efficiency is no longer a priority for the folks who are trying to extract as much money from the government as possible without the constraints of basic ethical behaviour.
But my point is not that this isn't a concentration camp, it's that calling it one is historically accurate but in a way that can cause confusion due to over 80 years of intentionally ambiguous terminology. The good guys have internment camps, the bad guys have concentration camps.
-
@futurebird @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes
The Nazis didn't do that even after they'd built their death camps, for two reasons.
First, shooting people isn't actually that cheap. You still need to dispose of the bodies. Killing a load of people in the same place makes it easier put them in mass graves.
Second, if you shoot people in the streets then, as you say, the optics are bad, but that matters for two reasons. People will be more likely to resist if they know that the alternative is death, and people are more likely to help people they know will die without help. If you keep up the fiction that they're 'just' being relocated, you can persuade a large portion of the population to not help them and convince them that resisting to the point of being shot is not worth it.
If you want to systematically exterminate people, letting them know that's what you're doing makes it harder, and having to do it where they are is expensive. Some of this has probably changed since the 1930s, because efficiency is no longer a priority for the folks who are trying to extract as much money from the government as possible without the constraints of basic ethical behaviour.
But my point is not that this isn't a concentration camp, it's that calling it one is historically accurate but in a way that can cause confusion due to over 80 years of intentionally ambiguous terminology. The good guys have internment camps, the bad guys have concentration camps.
@david_chisnall @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes
Really good points. I just wonder if it is possible to explain to people that "mass deportation" isn't possible. The notion that people should "follow the immigration law" in this very uncritical way remains uncontested and uncontroversial even among people who see themselves as liberals.
And they think "mass deportation" could be a legal and orderly process but this isn't physically possible.
Mass deportation means concentration camps.
-
There are metal bunk beds in cages, toilets in the corner and gruel as food.
What more do you need?
This isn't supposed to be a prison (not that prisons being like this would be OK either) but it's not a "prison" which is for those convicted of crimes. It's a "holding facility" but set up like a human flesh warehouse.
That is an internment camp.
It is a place where people are gathered, concentrated. A concentration camp.
The end.
The existence of our prison system has normalized treating people in this way so that my point about "these aren't criminals" is lost in the noise.
Which is why having prisons like these camps for any people warrants more resistance.
If we were a country where even "real criminals" were not treated this way this would stand out more clearly.
-
The existence of our prison system has normalized treating people in this way so that my point about "these aren't criminals" is lost in the noise.
Which is why having prisons like these camps for any people warrants more resistance.
If we were a country where even "real criminals" were not treated this way this would stand out more clearly.
I found it interesting (disturbing, upsetting) that the Florida concentration camp is a "men's only" facility. There is no reason why women and children couldn't also be sent there, there are many women and children in the same category but I think Americans have been desensitized to seeing adult men (mostly non-white) in such conditions by our prison system.
The people doing this are thinking about optics and how to desensitize the public to more and more violence.
-
I found it interesting (disturbing, upsetting) that the Florida concentration camp is a "men's only" facility. There is no reason why women and children couldn't also be sent there, there are many women and children in the same category but I think Americans have been desensitized to seeing adult men (mostly non-white) in such conditions by our prison system.
The people doing this are thinking about optics and how to desensitize the public to more and more violence.
"Where are the men's right's activists livid at the way that notions of masculinity are being used to enable abuse?" I say, knowing exactly where they are and why they are silent.
The politicians and people running this concentration camp like to show images of huge crowds of men. Because it fits into a known category for many Americans. But the reason why those men are in that camp is a flimsy pretext that could also apply to a grandmother or a child.
-
Anyone who calls me hysterical for that last bit would have said I was hysterical about "they will set up camps" when I saw the "mass deportation now" signs.
Mass deportation isn't *possible* it's a euphemism. It always ends up being a euphemism.
@futurebird @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes
My current thinking is that every American needs to do a personal risk assessment based on the fact that there is (or will be within weeks) no rule of law as we understand it.
I realize that some Americans have been in this position to some degree throughout the history of the country, but this is exponentially more serious for everyone. Imagine the worst possible outcome and be prepared for it as best you can be.
-
@futurebird @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes
My current thinking is that every American needs to do a personal risk assessment based on the fact that there is (or will be within weeks) no rule of law as we understand it.
I realize that some Americans have been in this position to some degree throughout the history of the country, but this is exponentially more serious for everyone. Imagine the worst possible outcome and be prepared for it as best you can be.
@VirginiaHolloway @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes
This kind of caution is probably good. But I see some promising positive signs. For example it's a good thing that companies that supply these facilities put tape over their logos when they drive in.
Find out who they are anyway.
If you know people who work for these companies let them know what you think of that work.
We as a nation *do* need to give our permission for this to get worse and we're be tested to see how much we will allow.
-
@VirginiaHolloway @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes
This kind of caution is probably good. But I see some promising positive signs. For example it's a good thing that companies that supply these facilities put tape over their logos when they drive in.
Find out who they are anyway.
If you know people who work for these companies let them know what you think of that work.
We as a nation *do* need to give our permission for this to get worse and we're be tested to see how much we will allow.
@VirginiaHolloway @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes
Someone needs to wear the boots. And someone needs to make dinner for the people who wear the boots.
We should keep exposing the people who work for ICE, the contractors who supplied the metal bunk beds, the company that delivers the food. Everyone who participates in making the concentration camps.
-
I found it interesting (disturbing, upsetting) that the Florida concentration camp is a "men's only" facility. There is no reason why women and children couldn't also be sent there, there are many women and children in the same category but I think Americans have been desensitized to seeing adult men (mostly non-white) in such conditions by our prison system.
The people doing this are thinking about optics and how to desensitize the public to more and more violence.
@futurebird @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes when they were grabbing people to send to CECOT they were looking specifically for people with tattoos. It’s all about optics to make the base happy
-
@futurebird @AnarchoNinaAnalyzes when they were grabbing people to send to CECOT they were looking specifically for people with tattoos. It’s all about optics to make the base happy
Not just the base it's so the general US public can tell themselves "it's not THAT bad" because they can sort the disturbing images into categories they have been desensitized into not seeing for what they really are.