Ranting Rosie and the Truth About Immigration Detention


When D-List, celebrity, has-beens Andy Cohen and Rosie O’Donnell get together, most Americans don’t expect intellectual analysis and penetrating insight. But O’Donnell’s recent appearance on Bravo’s “Watch What Happens Live After Show” demonstrated a level of ignorance that is shocking even for the generally clueless denizens of Hollywood.
Glomming onto a disturbing trend amongst politicians, pundits and entertainment personalities, O’Donnell made the astonishing assertion that there are “concentration camps” across the United States where migrant children are “separated from their families” and detained. According to O’Donnell, “There are over 100,000 camps in nearly every state. There’s between 10,000 and 13,000 children, that could fill Radio City Music Hall twice. That’s how many children unaccompanied alone in these camps.”
One presumes that O’Donnell isreferring to immigration detention centers maintained by U.S. Immigration andCustoms Enforcement (ICE), U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) andcontractors who provide detention facilities to both agencies. However, Ms.O’Donnell’s insane utterance is so outrageous that most reasonable observersprobably have no idea what she is talking about. (It also seems pretty clearthat Ms. O’Donnell has absolutely no idea what she is talking about.)
So, let us, as social justicewarriors like to say, take a moment to unpack Rosie’s rant and demonstrate justhow absurd it was:
- There are 50 states in the Union. That would mean that if Ranting Rosie is correct, there are 2,000 immigration “concentration camps” in each state.
- According to CBP, through May of 2019, it has apprehended 56,728 unaccompanied alien children and 332,981 alien family units.
- That’s a total of 389,709 people who are supposedly subject to detention in this vast network of alleged “concentration camps.”
If all of the migrant children, and every adult presenting with childrenas a family unit, were detained, there would be approximately four inmates ineach of what O’Donnell calls “concentration camps.” If we just include theunaccompanied migrant children, and the roughly one-third of family units whomwe can safely presume are kids, that drops to one detainee per “camp.”
In reality, however, ICE has repeatedly requested additional funding for detention beds, because Congress generally approves money for only 40,000-50,000 general detention beds and 2,000-3,000 family detention beds. It’s definitely not maintaining a massive web of “camps” in order to terrorize small groups of migrant kids.
Currently, ICE uses approximately210 facilities that are approved for detaining immigration violators longerthan 72 hours. That’s about four per state. They consist of a combination ofICE-run facilities, leased space in U.S. Marshals Service or Federal Bureau ofPrisons facilities and leased space in state and local facilities. In responseto emergent situations, like the current border crisis, both ICE and CBP willlease additional space and/or set up temporary camps, similar to those operatedby the Federal Emergency Management Agency in the aftermath of naturaldisasters.
Add to the above statistics thefact that ICE regularly paroles foreign nationals into the United States, dueto a consistent lack of detention space, and the reality is that the only thingcoming out of O’Donnell’s mouth is hot air.
But O’Donnell, and most of the rest of Tinseltown, don’t care about the truth. Rosie and her celebrity buddies are only interested in implementing their misguided vision of a Utopian, borderless world. In order to do that, they are willing to play fast and loose with the truth. And they’ll do so even at the risk of trivializing the suffering of true concentration camp victims and slandering a president who’s simply trying to re-establish the integrity of our southern border, which has been rendered nearly irrelevant by decades of lax immigration enforcement.