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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsFeds buying immigration warehouses because goal is housing at least 136,000 people.
By Jamiles Lartey
Down an industrial row in Surprise, a suburb of Phoenix, theres little of the unexpected: Beverage trucks zip in and out of one boxy grey warehouse to the right. At another site to the left, the open lot is stacked with rows of chemical storage tanks.
Then theres one (400,000 square-foot) building sitting empty. In late January, the Department of Homeland Security bought it for $70 million in cash, part of a reported $38 billion shopping spree for millions of square feet of commercial real estate to be retrofitted as immigration detention bedspace. Bloomberg reported late last month that DHS is eyeing nearly two dozen sites that, if fully completed, could add enough capacity to double the current detention population of about 68,000.
Over a hundred local residents spoke out against the effort during a five-hour Surprise city council meeting earlier this month, raising concerns that ran the gamut. Some people worried about some detainees with a criminal history being held in the community. Some pointed to the possible strain on water, sewer, electrical infrastructure, traffic and emergency services. One speaker cited lost revenue the federal government is exempt from local taxes. But most people offered broader condemnations of the Trump administrations immigration enforcement crackdown, and simply didnt want that project to be part of the towns legacy.
... Earlier this week, in the shadow of the sprawling warehouse building in Surprise, I sat down with Lisa Everett, a local conservative political activist who has been among the loudest critics of the plan. A three-time Trump voter, Everett told me she was a strong supporter of tightening the U.S. border, and deportation efforts that target people with violent convictions, but that she had profound issues with the broader immigration dragnet.
Could the conservative ice be cracking? Everett asks the perfect question: If deportation is the point, why is all the housing necessary? We should all be asking our U.S. House and Senate members that question.
https://www.themarshallproject.org/2026/02/14/ice-arizona-texas-georgia-warehouse
gab13by13
(31,733 posts)is an immigration warehouse. American citizens are also in those concentration camps.
allegorical oracle
(6,367 posts)dalton99a
(93,044 posts)Excellent question, indeed.
WhiskeyGrinder
(26,746 posts)Hope22
(4,587 posts)or at home!
Irish_Dem
(80,489 posts)While Americans cannot afford groceries, healthcare, education.
gab13by13
(31,733 posts)and the big cuts to healthcare from the Big Ugly Death Bill take effect Dec. 1, after the election.
The articles I see scroll across my home page are all about how Krasnov's economic agenda is working, the DOW is at 50,000.
Irish_Dem
(80,489 posts)The rest of us not so much.
allegorical oracle
(6,367 posts)generally leases it for the time it's needed. That $38 billion could be put to way better use.
leftstreet
(39,663 posts)It's doubtful that $38 billion spending spree will include actual facility renovation and detention housing
gab13by13
(31,733 posts)No one will ever the insides of them.
OC375
(568 posts)Sounds like someone watched it and thought the parts detailing immigration and Ellis Island would make for a good policy model. Whats old is new.
Botany
(76,814 posts)No charges, no trials, no warrants, and just the charge that they were immigrants and dont
think for one second that they will not come after democrats or reporters or LGBT or union
members or environmentalists or scientists or .
gab13by13
(31,733 posts)how did the German people allow this to happen?
We can't even call them concentration camps, we call them detention centers.
I also guarantee that many people in those concentration camps have been murdered. If they can get away with publicly murdering Good and Pretti, just imagine what they are doing behind closed doors.
Turbineguy
(39,934 posts)allegorical oracle
(6,367 posts)Swede
(38,895 posts)gab13by13
(31,733 posts)Billionaires want less poor people, how they get to that goal doesn't matter to them.