A few years ago, a friend faced with a family dilemma that involved competing loyalties, asked my advice. Obviously, I was not going to make her choices for her, but I offered a basic rule for testing the morality of potential action or inaction: Will this (my actions) result in
But in the situation of the children, the Trump threats continue to have real consequence. The administration has lost track of 1400 separated children. The administration admits to having at least 2500 separated children in various detention facilities under conditions that are so inadequate as to bear comparison to concentration camps. Setsuka Ina, aged 75, a Japanese-American survivor of the internment camps that stain American history of its conduct in WWII, has used exactly this term to describe the federal facilities for children at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, a place he remembers as the site of his own family's incarceration in 1942.
Seven asylum-seeking migrant children have now died while under custody of the government. In response to a suit against the Trump government's handling of the
detained children, a government lawyer argued that toothbrushes, soap and appropriate sleeping arrangements were not necessary for the government to meet its requirement to keep migrant children in "safe and sanitary" conditions.
An incredulous judge of the appeals court asked the attorney, "Are you arguing seriously that you don't believe the government is required to do something other than what I described: Cold all night long. Lights on all night long. Sleep on the concrete floor and you get an aluminum blanket?"
The problem is that like many inhuman conditions, like government instituted torture, or violation of human rights, like Guantanamo, the original overwhelming protests are receding in volume as time goes on and these outrageous criminal behaviours are becoming normalised. We learn to live with them at our common peril. Why would any future administration headed by people more representative of America's ideals have standing to support human rights abroad when this administration has so cavalierly violated fundamental human rights at home. As an American with pride in his military service — unlike this president who told Piers Morgan Vietnam was too far away — I can't let this criminal behaviour represent America. That is not who we are or who we want to be.
*Jay Kuten is an American-trained forensic psychiatrist who emigrated to New Zealand for the fly fishing. He spent 40 years comforting the afflicted and intends to spend the rest afflicting the comfortable.