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Human Beings, Not Statistics (UPDATED)

These are real live human beings we're talking about here, people, not statistics. Via TPMMuckraker,

A priest's and nun's mission to find the mother of a nursing baby was thwarted today after they said officials from Camp Dodge would not let them inside to tell their story. Sister Christine Feagan, from the St. Mary's Hispanic Ministry, and The Rev. Jim Miller, who is a priest from the St. Mary's Parish, both said they drove to Camp Dodge [an ICE detention center] this afternoon to find out the status of a nursing mother who was deported and nursing a baby. . . .

At the church's Hispanic ministry, the baby whose mother was arrested was passed among staff and a community activist who had agreed to help care for her.

They said they don't know when the girl, whose father is absent, will be reunited with her mother.

UPDATE: Justin Rood is asking all the right questions:

In the name of fighting identity theft, hundreds of Homeland Security agents rounded up 1,300 people in raids Tuesday, nearly all illegal immigrants. Only a few dozen of those arrested had any tie to identity thefts, it turned out. Too bad: nearly all of them will be deported for standard immigration violations.

The deported workers will be forced to leave behind an uncounted number of children, including infants. This practice isn't new, but the scale of the raids -- the largest such operation in U.S. history -- makes the number of forcibly abandoned children likely to be unusually high.

DHS arrested workers who came from stable, working-class neighborhoods. Their kids were enrolled in schools. The communities are reported to be ripped apart by the raids; in some, the local authorities refused to help the feds. In some cases state authorities intervened to demand DHS behave better.

What's the monetary cost of mounting the biggest raid on immigrants in U.S. history? What's going to be the cost to the communities affected? What is the cost that will be borne by state and local governments?

And most importantly, who is served by raids that by any measure failed to achieve their stated goal, and at such great expense?

This is as counterproductive as our idiotic "war" on drugs.

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