Border Patrol is Investigating Itself Following Deaths, Report Reveals

In a vehicle pursuit that killed our client’s son, a newly-uncovered report shows Border Patrol’s unauthorized, conflict-ridden Critical Incident Team are the lead investigators.

An ACLU client looking at family photos.

Border Patrol interior checkpoints are a cruel and pointless burden on borderland residents

An ACLU lawsuit uncovered Border Patrol documents that show agents are trained to sidestep Constitutional protections.

By Shaw Drake, Nia Rucker

Photograph of a Customs and Border Protection truck parked on the side of the road

Five Things to Know About the Title 42 Immigrant Expulsion Policy

Since March 2020, the government has misused the order to kick out people seeking asylum more than 1.7 million times.

Demonstrators standing in front of a mobile billboard that says, “It’s past time to end Trump-era policies at the border.”

Our Fight Against the Muslim Ban Showed the Solidarity We Need to End Ongoing Abuses at the Border

Our fight against the Muslim ban showed the beauty and power of solidarity in America’s most diverse city. Now, we must continue this fight with immigrants and border communities in Texas.

By Edgar Saldivar

Orange and navy collage graphic featuring barbed-wired fence, a plane, and a rally in which people are holding signs that read 'no ban' and 'unite 4 people'

The border is my home. It represents hope for many.

When someone asks me where I’m from, I tell them I’m Rio Grande Valley born and raised. I was born in Harlingen, Texas and lived in nearby Elsa nearly all my life. Until I left for college at 21 years old, I had never realized how much I took the valley for granted; how much I love the food and weather, the livestock show, and South Padre Island. I have also come to realize how much I love the security and complexity of the valley. I grew up at the intersection of two very different countries, where a unique and collaborative culture has flourished over generations. I never knew it was one of the safest regions in the country, it was just something I felt both spiritually and emotionally.  When I moved across the country for college, I experienced culture shock. Meeting people from different backgrounds than the predominantly Hispanic/Latino border region I was used to pushed me out of my comfort zone. I learned and experienced new things I had never encountered growing up such as racism, microaggressions, and implicit biases. In hindsight, the valley was a shield that protected me. But ignorance is not so blissful, as they say. Being slapped in the face with the realities of present-day racism and prejudice in the United States has forced me to re-evaluate my own ideas about society. I struggled with the concept that I might be using the homogeneity of the valley as a form of protection to remain in my blissfully unaware bubble.

By Manuel L. Hinojosa

Image of the Rio Grande near Brownsville Texas

Loving Books in a Time of Increasing Censorship

This year’s Banned Books Week (Sept. 26-Oct. 2) has a renewed importance to me and the community of students I serve. You see, I’m a librarian at a public, inner-city high school in Houston. I’ve been an educator and librarian for more than 15 years. I’d like to think that I know what my kids like and need in the safe space I try to create for them through the library and all of its resources.  But I sometimes worry about pressures on school communities to censor and exclude certain kinds of information that we as educators strive to teach our kids, especially the ones that most need to see themselves in the materials they consume. What’s important for people to remember is that it’s not just books that are being censored, but any kind of information that can shape a narrative or idea, from a speaker invited to give a talk, to an LGBTQ Pride flag hanging in a window.  School districts in Texas are notorious for a more traditional form of idea censorship through the act of officially banning books from school libraries or book club lists. Earlier this year, 13 books were banned from school reading lists in the Leander Independent School District just outside of Austin. Some parents complained about books depicting sexual acts, violence, or profanity — all things that can be accessed in microseconds on a teenager’s smart phone. The situation got so tenuous that a school board member recently resigned. 

By Christy S.

Banned books week

Addressing Racialized Violence Against Migrants Requires a Complete Overhaul of Customs and Border Protection

Absent deep reforms, Border Patrol’s long history of racist, violent abuse means inhumanity like that displayed in Del Rio, Texas will continue to repeat itself.

By Shaw Drake, Kate Huddleston

El Paso, Texas border wall between USA and Mexico running thru the desert.

20 Years After 9/11, We Have a Roadmap Toward a More Just and Equitable Future

Will Biden and Congress follow it?

By Hina Shamsi

A statue of the goddess Justitia holds a pan of scales in front of the building of the district and regional court.

Things to Know About the Revival of Trump-Era “Remain in Mexico” Policy

Here’s what you need to know about the past, present, and future of the harmful MPP policy.

By Omar Jadwat

People press signs against a closed gate to the migrant encampment, asking then President Donald Trump to end the Migrant Protection Protocols during a rally at the encampment in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico on October 25, 2020.