Statistic Of The Day: Trump Administration Planning On Holding 30,000 Refug
Terrible news from today’s Washington Examiner – see Trump administration could be holding 30,000 border kids by August, officials say. I’ve been regularly updating The Bes…
Hundreds of children wait in Border Patrol facility in Texas
McALLEN, Texas (AP) — Inside an old warehouse in South Texas, hundreds of children wait in a series of cages created by metal fencing. One cage had 20 children inside.
Article: DHS: Nearly 2,000 Children Separated From Adults At Border In 6 We
The government says the Office of Refugee Resettlement, charged with finding homes for solo children or those who have been separated from their families, has more than 10,000 children in shelters.
Article: Separated at the Border From Their Parents: In Six Weeks, 1,995 Ch
The Department of Homeland Security released the figures as President Trump sought to shift blame for practice that has become the signature policy of his immigration agenda.
U.S. government says nearly 2,000 child separations at Mexico border in und
The government said on Friday that 1,995 children were separated from 1,940 adults at the U.S.-Mexico border between April 19 and May 31, as the Trump administration implements stricter border enforcement policies.
A New Backdoor Around the Fourth Amendment: The CLOUD Act | Electronic Fron
There’s a new, proposed backdoor to our data, which would bypass our Fourth Amendment protections to communications privacy. It is built into a dangerous bill called the CLOUD Act, which would allow police at home and abroad to seize cross-border data without following the privacy rules where the...
Article: Privacy Complaints Mount Over Phone Searches at U.S. Border Since
Complaints filed by people whose electronics were searched at the border without warrants highlight a growing debate over privacy, security and technology.
How to legally cross a US (or other) border without surrendering your data
The combination of 2014's Supreme Court decision not to hear Cotterman (where the 9th Circuit held that the data on your devices was subject to suspicionless border-searches, and suggested that…
Canadian man charged for not disclosing his phone’s password to border agen
A Canadian man has been charged with "obstructing border officials" after refusing to disclose his BlackBerry password to Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) officials when reentering Canada after a trip to the Dominican Republic.
Effort to recover Indigenous language also revitalizes culture, history and identity
Indigenous people’s languages were largely lost as a result of forced assimilation efforts in the U.S. Here’s why one tribal leader says the languages should be brought back.
States return recordings of Indigenous oral histories to tribal control
More control may mean that some materials won’t be as readily accessible to the public as they once were. But it also means that the descendants of the people on tape will decide what materials should be in the public realm.
Forty years on from the launch of Banned Books Week, censorship is once again on the rise. John Self considers the long and ignoble global history of book-banning.
Reflections | The Chinese history book that got 70 people executed, some very slowly
In a famous example of ‘literary inquisition’ in Chinese history, more than 1,000 people were punished for the publication of one book, including the author’s family, printers and buyers.