Rep. LaMonica McIver says private prisons are profiting by jailing some who’ve already signed deportation agreements.
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Brazil
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Poland
seen from China
seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from Netherlands
seen from Türkiye
Rep. LaMonica McIver says private prisons are profiting by jailing some who’ve already signed deportation agreements.
In an apparent attempt to avoid public outcry and scrutiny, ICE has sought to secure these leases in private. So we made a searchable map of
STAR TRIBUNE: “No Humanity” in the detention centers. Overcrowded cells where immigrants “have to take turns lying down”
Private prisons raking in billions while they cut costs, feed them little, ignore health issues.
All in our name. 🇺🇸
https://www.startribune.com/no-humanity-detainees-describe-conditions-inside-whipple-federal-building/601566788
A for-profit prison sued the government for not giving them enough prisoners.
The idea that "capitalism is freedom" is laughable.
How to shatter the class solidarity of the ruling class
I'm touring my new, nationally bestselling novel The Bezzle! Catch me WEDNESDAY (Apr 11) at UCLA, then Chicago (Apr 17), Torino (Apr 21) Marin County (Apr 27), Winnipeg (May 2), Calgary (May 3), Vancouver (May 4), and beyond!
Audre Lorde counsels us that "The Master's Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master's House," while MLK said "the law cannot make a man love me, but it can restrain him from lynching me." Somewhere between replacing the system and using the system lies a pragmatic – if easily derailed – course.
Lorde is telling us that a rotten system can't be redeemed by using its own chosen reform mechanisms. King's telling us that unless we live, we can't fight – so anything within the system that makes it easier for your comrades to fight on can hasten the end of the system.
Take the problems of journalism. One old model of journalism funding involved wealthy newspaper families profiting handsomely by selling local appliance store owners the right to reach the townspeople who wanted to read sports-scores. These families expressed their patrician love of their town by peeling off some of those profits to pay reporters to sit through municipal council meetings or even travel overseas and get shot at.
In retrospect, this wasn't ever going to be a stable arrangement. It relied on both the inconstant generosity of newspaper barons and the absence of a superior way to show washing-machine ads to people who might want to buy washing machines. Neither of these were good long-term bets. Not only were newspaper barons easily distracted from their sense of patrician duty (especially when their own power was called into question), but there were lots of better ways to connect buyers and sellers lurking in potentia.
All of this was grossly exacerbated by tech monopolies. Tech barons aren't smarter or more evil than newspaper barons, but they have better tools, and so now they take 51 cents out of every ad dollar and 30 cents out of ever subscriber dollar and they refuse to deliver the news to users who explicitly requested it, unless the news company pays them a bribe to "boost" their posts:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2023/04/saving-news-big-tech
The news is important, and people sign up to make, digest, and discuss the news for many non-economic reasons, which means that the news continues to struggle along, despite all the economic impediments and the vulture capitalists and tech monopolists who fight one another for which one will get to take the biggest bite out of the press. We've got outstanding nonprofit news outlets like Propublica, journalist-owned outlets like 404 Media, and crowdfunded reporters like Molly White (and winner-take-all outlets like the New York Times).
But as Hamilton Nolan points out, "that pot of money…is only large enough to produce a small fraction of the journalism that was being produced in past generations":
https://www.hamiltonnolan.com/p/what-will-replace-advertising-revenue
For Nolan, "public funding of journalism is the only way to fix this…If we accept that journalism is not just a business or a form of entertainment but a public good, then funding it with public money makes perfect sense":
https://www.hamiltonnolan.com/p/public-funding-of-journalism-is-the
Having grown up in Canada – under the CBC – and then lived for a quarter of my life in the UK – under the BBC – I am very enthusiastic about Nolan's solution. There are obvious problems with publicly funded journalism, like the politicization of news coverage:
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2023/jan/24/panel-approving-richard-sharp-as-bbc-chair-included-tory-party-donor
And the transformation of the funding into a cheap political football:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/poilievre-defund-cbc-change-law-1.6810434
But the worst version of those problems is still better than the best version of the private-equity-funded model of news production.
But Nolan notes the emergence of a new form of hedge fund news, one that is awfully promising, and also terribly fraught: Hunterbrook Media, an investigative news outlet owned by short-sellers who pay journalists to research and publish damning reports on companies they hold a short position on:
https://hntrbrk.com/
For those of you who are blissfully distant from the machinations of the financial markets, "short selling" is a wager that a company's stock price will go down. A gambler who takes a short position on a company's stock can make a lot of money if the company stumbles or fails altogether (but if the company does well, the short can suffer literally unlimited losses).
Shorts have historically paid analysts to dig into companies and uncover the sins hidden on their balance-sheets, but as Matt Levine points out, journalists work for a fraction of the price of analysts and are at least as good at uncovering dirt as MBAs are:
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2024-04-02/a-hedge-fund-that-s-also-a-newspaper
What's more, shorts who discover dirt on a company still need to convince journalists to publicize their findings and trigger the sell-off that makes their short position pay off. Shorts who own a muckraking journalistic operation can skip this step: they are the journalists.
Posted today 6/11/26. One of many. This person is an investigative journalist, formerly of the Boston Globe and LA Times and a NYTimes best selling author . . .
As it seeks to ramp up deportations, the Trump administration has sent some migrants to far-flung places that aren't their home countries.
😡😡😡
Newly released audio of 911 calls made from the immigration detention center in Dilley, Texas, reveals extremely young children in physical
Oliver Willis at Daily Kos:
Newly released audio of 911 calls made from the immigration detention center in Dilley, Texas, reveals extremely young children in physical distress who have required serious medical attention. These incidents are occurring as fallout from President Donald Trump’s push for a mass deportation policy. NBC News published the calls on Friday and they reveal the human toll of the Trump administration’s actions. In the audio, staffers at Dilley explain a series of dire situations to 911 operators. For instance, in one case staffers report that that a 17-month-old child is suffering from respiratory distress, while in another call a 22-month-old child was having trouble breathing and had a reported oxygen level of 85%—levels below 95% are abnormal in children and brain activity can be affected at the 80-85% range. Other calls reveal children with fevers, fractures, and other medical issues. NBC reported that in at least three cases children had to be flown from the Dilley center to a specialized pediatric hospital. The Dilley cases are a real-world example of what studies conducted by scientists have previously uncovered—that the health of people detained at immigration centers, particularly children, suffer adverse effects compared to those who are not warehoused in these conditions.
[...] “The detention of children in these facilities is causing predictable, severe, and lasting harm to their mental and physical health,” they wrote, adding, “It is well established that even brief confinement can cause psychological trauma and lifelong harm by exposing children to toxic stress that disrupts brain development.” The Dilley detention center is the same location where Minnesota preschooler Liam Ramos and his family were taken by ICE after he was abducted, generating widespread public outrage which led to eventual release. Children being held at Dilley have described themselves as being kidnapped and told journalists with ProPublica about their anguish at being separated from their communities and families. After drawings and letters from children at Dilley became public, the facility began a crackdown on communication with the outside. Dilley is run by the private group CoreCivic and former President Joe Biden ended the policy of holding families there in 2021. Trump restarted family detention at Dilley last year as part of his push for mass deportation.
NBC News reports on 911 audio calls made from the ICE concentration camp in Dilley, Texas reveal the brutal condition that the children face in the facility.