Dr. Kate Sugarman has spent 20 years inside ICE jails reviewing records she says are falsified. She knows what these warehouse detention sites will become.
Thank you for reporting this. I thought a judge had stopped the conversation of the warehouse to a concentration camp in Williamsport. Has that ruling been overturned?
👀😱-This is so Deadly Serious for All of Us-It Must Be Stopped BEFORE THESE DETENTION CENTERS ARE OPENED! History tells us that once they open they will fill up immediately. THEY ARE VERY DIFFICULT TO SHUT DOWN AFTERWARD-& may take years.
Note that Dachau was a concentration camp (for political prisoners, etc) not an extermination camp. There were some executions. But a LOT of people died due to the conditions (disease, etc).
Thank you for bringing attention to this issue! I appreciated how clearly the piece highlights what is, at its core, a structural shift in how detention infrastructure is being conceived and scaled. The idea of converting warehouses into large-scale detention facilities is striking, and your article effectively captures both the logistical ambition and the unease it is generating across communities. What stood out to me most is the broader implication beyond any single facility: this represents a move toward industrializing detention capacity. Reports suggest plans to expand to tens of thousands of additional beds through warehouse conversions, often with limited local input and significant concerns about whether such spaces can meet the medical, environmental, and human needs required for detention settings. That raises important questions not only about infrastructure, but about oversight, standards of care, and the long-term direction of immigration policy. One aspect that might further strengthen the piece would be a deeper exploration of what safeguards and accountability mechanisms are in place or should be in place if these facilities move forward. Understanding how health services, legal access, and living conditions are ensured in such settings would add an important layer of clarity. Thanks again for engaging with a topic that sits at the intersection of policy, ethics, and public health!
This has been going on inpreparationfor at least a decade under the guise of FEMA shelters. This is what they were intended for, not FEMA shelters but mass detention & killing centers for American citizens.
Wow. Thank you for reporting on this. Excellent work.
This is essential info. Spread it around. Letters to Editors, etc.
Thank you, Michael, and thank you, Dr. Sugarman. I have restacked the hell out of this.
I've taken no end of shit for comparing ICE to the Gestapo. I see that Dr. Sugarman, a descendant of Holocaust survivors, makes similar comparisons.
Thank you for reporting this. I thought a judge had stopped the conversation of the warehouse to a concentration camp in Williamsport. Has that ruling been overturned?
Quite the opposite: https://projectsaltbox.substack.com/p/breaking-judge-extends-block-on-maryland
Thank you.
People need to take this seriously, not continue to be ignorant and hateful.
👀😱-This is so Deadly Serious for All of Us-It Must Be Stopped BEFORE THESE DETENTION CENTERS ARE OPENED! History tells us that once they open they will fill up immediately. THEY ARE VERY DIFFICULT TO SHUT DOWN AFTERWARD-& may take years.
stop this now!
Note that Dachau was a concentration camp (for political prisoners, etc) not an extermination camp. There were some executions. But a LOT of people died due to the conditions (disease, etc).
So important. Thank you Sally box and Dr Sugarman
Thank you for bringing attention to this issue! I appreciated how clearly the piece highlights what is, at its core, a structural shift in how detention infrastructure is being conceived and scaled. The idea of converting warehouses into large-scale detention facilities is striking, and your article effectively captures both the logistical ambition and the unease it is generating across communities. What stood out to me most is the broader implication beyond any single facility: this represents a move toward industrializing detention capacity. Reports suggest plans to expand to tens of thousands of additional beds through warehouse conversions, often with limited local input and significant concerns about whether such spaces can meet the medical, environmental, and human needs required for detention settings. That raises important questions not only about infrastructure, but about oversight, standards of care, and the long-term direction of immigration policy. One aspect that might further strengthen the piece would be a deeper exploration of what safeguards and accountability mechanisms are in place or should be in place if these facilities move forward. Understanding how health services, legal access, and living conditions are ensured in such settings would add an important layer of clarity. Thanks again for engaging with a topic that sits at the intersection of policy, ethics, and public health!
That is their intention. As many as possible. American genocide.
This has been going on inpreparationfor at least a decade under the guise of FEMA shelters. This is what they were intended for, not FEMA shelters but mass detention & killing centers for American citizens.
They already are!!
I'm sickened every day that we've become this. Where is the outrage?