Josh Rushing

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Primer: Profits and Punishment

Here’s a primer for my latest episode of Fault Lines. It’s about for-profit immigration detention facilities in the US. This was put together by the show’s producer, Anjali Kamat.

For more on why undocumented migration from Mexico is at an all-time low see: http://is.gd/QXq5Pk & http://is.gd/xH0qNO

@DetentionWatch has a useful map of all the #immigration #detention ctrs in the US. http://is.gd/wD53hH

On average the federal govt pays prison operators – both private as well as county jails - $122 a day per detainee.

For more about the #dreamact and Jose Salcedo @slumdogsalcedo: http://is.gd/e4PMfD

#nosomosrubios is a campaign critical of Sen. Marco Rubio’s bid for VP launched by @presenteorg http://is.gd/wYe3bP

Sen. Rubio is now pushing a Republican version of the DREAM act: http://is.gd/tz3a82 & http://is.gd/pJmi1B

See “Marco Rubio’s Prison Problem” by Beau Hodai: http://is.gd/c4oRCd

Excellent backgrounder on profits & #immigration #detention from @DetentionWatch http://is.gd/g7PZIl #dwn

Also great on immigrant gold rush & #privateprisons - Judy Greene & Sunita Patel: http://is.gd/RknEwW

From Oct 2003 – Mar 2012: 129 deaths in #ICE detention: http://is.gd/DtL7P1

@ACLU is a great resource on sexual abuse of detainees in #ICE custody http://is.gd/m2h6Z7

Even if all the new civil detention ctrs R built, 86 % of #ICE detainees wd still be held in jail-like facilities http://is.gd/W5poGg

Meanwhile Republican Congressman Lamar Smith of Texas calls detention reform a “holiday”: http://is.gd/G0JI3I

Since 2009 #ICE has added or promised over 6000 new detention beds, most run by #privateprisons. via @humanrights1st

Critical look at reforms to detention system by @kalhan in Columbia Law Review http://is.gd/Pttdet

 Is the focus on conditions taking attention away from ending detention altogether? http://is.gd/h91P6U

Alternatives to detention: cheaper & more humane: http://is.gd/Lr3QqS via @LIRSorg

Telephones in #ICE detention facilities are operated by private companies that charge exorbitant rates for making & receiving calls

We asked #ICE how much #privateprisons might be saving by using detainee labor instead of hiring workers to cook & clean

Gary Mead of #ICE said he didn’t know because the operating costs for #privateprisons are “proprietary information.”

#Privateprisons are not subject to FOIA requests. On lack of accountability & abuse concerns: @ACLU report: http://is.gd/FRx4Ve

Prison Legal News is another great resource on #privateprisons http://is.gd/UhMrNu

A brief history of immigration detention: http://is.gd/pRkelt #DWN

@silkys13 has a stark history of #immigration #detention after 9/11 in @SamarMagazine: http://is.gd/DbbuyH

Infographic on Secure Communities by @reneefeltz & @stokelybaksh on their site: Deportation Nation http://is.gd/wZ4Gm9

@sethfw on the “criminal aliens” captured in recent #ICE raids across the country

http://is.gd/wUC8x8

Is the Dept of Homeland Security redefining criminality? http://is.gd/JyxYDK

Many were against a proposed #ICE facility in SouthWest Ranches run by the largest #privateprison company: CCA http://is.gd/qhdd0Y

Calls for Wall Street to divest from #privateprisons: http://is.gd/yio9xo & http://is.gd/OODZt0

ALEC is behind many of the tough laws on crime & immigration benefitting #privateprisons: http://is.gd/xvXqZp via @ALECexposed

On lobbying by GEO & CCA see http://is.gd/tXRrRl & @Justice_Policy report Gaming the System: http://is.gd/g20GCD

Also an older site by @reneefeltz & @stokelybaksh: Business of Detention http://is.gd/v1ao52

@txprisonbidness is a great resource on detention in Texas: http://is.gd/h8W8qe

A brief and accessible introduction to the mandatory detention of non-citizens from @DetentionWatch: http://is.gd/DHAu1i #DWN

Most people are surprised to hear that a large number of greencard holders like Naz can end up in immigration detention

Pearsall, where Naz was held, was the site of alleged sexual abuse in 2008. Last year guards protested their low wages http://is.gd/iizp5D

Naz also talked about the poor medical care in Pearsall and how it took days before he could see a nurse when he was ill or injured

@Nomoredeaths has a strong report on abuses by the border patrol: http://is.gd/FySBnn

At a courthouse in McAllen, TX, we witnessed but weren’t allowed to film the mass trial of some 35 men and women.

Some had grown up in the US, others in Mexico or Guatemala. They all had family in the US.

The trial – a daily occurrence - was heartbreaking. One lawyer watching said: “This is where the American dream comes to die.”

Prosecuting people for illegal entry makes up more than half of all federal criminal filings: http://is.gd/qhQxYE

Illegal re-entry cases have surged under President Obama: http://is.gd/lKvFiR

 

ASK ME (not really me) ANYTHING!

Naz, who is featured in my latest episode of Fault Lines (see previous post for video), is on Reddit right now doing an Ask Me Anything.

He was detained and held in a for-profit detention center in Pearsall, Texas, for ten months without bail. A few days after our interview with him he was surprisingly released. Go ask him a question!

Fault Lines: Profits and Punishment

Here’s our latest episode. We look into the growing trend of privatized, immigration detainee centers in the US. I’d love to hear what you think about it.

Later today I’ll post a primer on the subject with tons of links.

Congratulations to Anjali Kamat on producing her first Fault Lines episode. She did a terrific job. Great filming by Thierry Humeau and editing by Goran Maric and Warwick Meade. A nod as well to our EP Mat Skene.

Fault Lines: Profits and Punishment. Here’s the promo for tonight’s episode. These promos are put together at our headquarters in Doha, Qatar. It’s kind of weird that they use someone else’s voice for it. Whoever it is has a great voice, but it’s totally different than mine, which you’ll hear throughout the actual show. Oh well.

Fault Lines: Profits & Punishment

My next episode of Fault Lines premieres tonight. We investigate the booming business of private immigration detainee facilities in the US. It debuts at 6:30 pm EST. If you don’t get Al Jazeera English on your cable system, then you can watch it live stream for free on YouTube. I’ll be tweeting during the episode and will take questions via Twitter immediately following the show. 

Here’s the video for Shock by Ana Tijoux. If you watched the Fault Lines episode Chile Rising, you’ll recognize the school and many of the faces in this video. If you missed that episode, no worries, find it here (or by scrolling down).

Fault Lines: On the Pulse of the Pentagon

The US announced a new military strategy today at a Pentagon briefing. Much of the discussion concerned what could be read as predictable—and cyclic—budget cuts of a post-war drawdown. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta also took pains to mention what wouldn’t feel the fiscal pinch: offensive and defensive cyber security and unmanned systems.

We at Fault Lines have covered and predicted both of these trends.

First with an episode called Cyberwar.

A growing fear of computer hackers—a term encompassing a broad range of entities from digital spy rings to information thieves to cyberarmies of kids, criminals and terrorists (some backed by nation states)—and their potentially massive threat to national security has Washington maneuvering into position to defend its assets from a new style of warfare: one without foot soldiers, guns or missiles. Crucial national infrastructure, high value commercial secrets, tens of billions of dollars in defense contracts—as well as values like privacy and freedom of expression—are at stake. 

In this episode of Fault Lines, I enter the domain of “cyber” and speak to a former US national security official turned cybersecurity consultant, a Silicon Valley CEO, a hacker, and those who warn of a growing arms race in cyberspace.

Is the US contributing to the militarisation of cyberspace? Are the reports of cyber threats being distorted by a burgeoning security industry? And are the battles being waged in cyberspace interfering with the Internet as we know it? 

Then last week we filed a report titled Robot Wars.

Over the past decade, the US military has shifted the way it fights its wars, deploying more unmanned systems in the battlefield than ever before.

Today there are more than 7,000 drones and 12,000 ground robots in use by all branches of the military.

These systems mean less American deaths and also less political risk for the US when it takes acts of lethal force – often outside of official war zones.

But US lethal drone strikes in countries like Pakistan have brought up serious questions about the legal and political implications of using these systems.

Fault Lines looks at how these new weapons of choice are allowing the US to stretch the international laws of war and what it could mean when more and more autonomy is developed for these lethal machines.

Read More

Ana Tijoux, my favorite rapper, Chilean or otherwise. Her song, “Shock”, is based on the Naomi Klein’s book, Shock Doctrine.

Check Shock out here.

Find Shock Doctrine here.

And for a look into the Chilean student movement today watch my latest episode of Fault Lines here.

Here’s the promo for my latest episode of Fault Lines…

Check out some of the photos from this trip below…

And see the full episode HERE

I was in Santiago in October filming an episode of Fault Lines about the student movement there. At one of the demonstrations the marchers passed by a tall apartment complex where someone on top of the building was throwing buckets of water over the edge. The students loved it. Check out the show here.

My latest episode of Fault Lines! Check it out…

ajfaultlines:

Here’s the new episode that just aired on Al Jazeera English. Description below. 

This is our last episode in this season, and we expect to be back in early spring. We’ll keep you apprised here, on Twitter @ajfaultlines and on our Facebook page

Chilean students have taken over schools and city streets in the largest protests the country has seen in decades.

These actions are causing a political crisis for the country’s billionaire President, Sebastian Piñera.

The students are demanding free education, and an end to the privatization of their schools and universities. The free-market based approach to education was implemented by the military dictator Augusto Pinochet in his last days in power.

As the demonstrations in Chile coincide with protests erupting globally, Fault Lines follows the Chilean student movement during their fight in a country that is among the most unequal in the world.

This episode of Fault Lines first aired on Al Jazeera English on January 2, 2012 at 2230 GMT.

(Source: youtube.com)

Here’s last week’s Fault Lines, where we looked at the increasing use of robots by the US military and ask what that means for the world. Enjoy or our robot overlords will get you. 

En Toma: Scenes from an occupied high school in Santiago, Chile.

Students in Chile have staged massive protests demanding free education. I went inside one of Chile’s oldest high schools, Liceo Miguel Luis Amunátegui, a school held by students for eight months last year, to interview Alfredo Vielma, 17, for an episode of Fault Lines. (Alfredo is pictured in two of the photos above: in front of the mural and silhouetted.) For the episode—which debuts tonight on Al Jazeera English—we followed the movement for two weeks and discovered that the students’ anger went well beyond issues of education.

Stream the show live at 5:30pm EST here and follow me on Twitter here. I’ll tweet throughout the show and it’ll be like we’re watching it together. 

We won the duPont Award! I’m insanely jealous that it was for an episode of Fault Lines, Haiti: Six Months On, filmed by my colleagues: Sebastian Walker, Andrea Schmidt and Snorre Wik. You can see their deserving work here.

It feels great to be recognized for our work, but this represents something else as well. Not that long ago, US media awards would never honor Al Jazeera. For years we’ve been judged by a reputation created and promulgated by the same people who promised you weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and that Saddam had ties to terrorism. Winning the duPont heralds a new age for Al Jazeera English in the US, a time in which we are judged for the content of our coverage rather than the accusations of a few. See for youself, we stream live, for free, all of the time: www.youtube.com/aljazeeraenglish.

Stills from tonight’s Fault Lines episode. It debuts at 530 EST. If you can watch or stream it, I’ll be live tweeting. For info on how to see it, see previous post…

ajfaultlines:

Our Fault Lines episode on drones and the future of the US military and intelligence airs tonight at 2230 GMT/5:30p EST on Al Jazeera English. 

Watch online.

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