Reprinted from Counterpunch
During the run-up to America's war against Iraq, I told audiences that Bush would certainly win reelection. Some people broke down in tears.
That's my job: telling people things they prefer not to hear, especially about the future. Being Cassandra isn't much fun. Because we live in a nation in decline and yielding to incipient fascism, the more I'm right -- i.e., most of the time -- the more I annoy my readers.
So please believe me when I say this gives me no pleasure: Donald Trump isn't bluffing when he threatens to deport the estimated 11 million people living in the U.S. illegally.
Are you undocumented? Prepare to go underground.
Are your papers in good standing? Are you a good person? Prepare a hiding place in your home.
Dark days are ahead.
Do not take comfort in the fact that Trump flip-flops on all sorts of issues. Contrary to his initial, typically strident position on abortion, the master demagogue now says women needn't fear imprisonment if they terminate their pregnancy (unless he changes his mind again). Even his much-ballyhooed Great Wall of Trump along the Mexican border may wind up as half a wall. He does this a lot.
But there's no way he'll back away from mass deportations.
Why are deportations different? Radical nativism, as defined by this promise to deport illegal immigrants, every single one of them, defined his campaign from the start. It's why he's here. It's why he won.
Reneging on deportations would be like Bernie Sanders asking Goldman Sachs for donations or Hillary Clinton changing her gender -- it would betray the raison d'etre of his campaign. He can't back down without losing most of his support.
The optics of the biggest forced population movement since those carried out by Hitler and Stalin would be awful. Police kicking down doors. Women and children dragged off in the middle of the night. Neighbors, friends, colleagues, lovers, spouses -- disappeared.
Countries of origin would be reluctant to absorb millions of new arrivals, all unemployed, many of them who came to the U.S. as children and thus have no memory of their "home" countries. So the Trump Administration would have to build concentration camps to house them.
Because the idea is so outlandish, so fundamentally un-American, it's too much to contemplate seriously, even for journalists. They're in denial. If Trump wins, however -- and it's entirely possible he will -- he will carry out his plan.
Legally, there's nothing to it. Trump doesn't need an act of Congress. He doesn't even have to sign an executive order. All he'll have to do to set this outrage in motion is pick up the phone and tell the head of Immigrations and Customs Enforcement to do his or her job: enforce the law.
Camps cost money. So do more agents. No problem. President Trump can shift his budget priorities in favor of ICE. He's already said he would triple ICE's enforcement division from 5,000 to 15,000 officers. The FBI would have to pitch in.
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