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Corporate Media More Worried About Avocado Toast Than Human Lives

April 7, 2019 By FAIR

10% Discount Coupon Code: POLITICSDONERIGHT

Trumpโ€™s border policies display zero regard for human rights, but for several news outlets, as Trump foments xenophobia, whatโ€™s at stake is brunch.

The New York Times (4/1/19) warned on Monday that the โ€œbeloved avocadoโ€ may soon be harder to come by in the US after President Donald Trump threatened in a tweet to close the Mexico border over migration. โ€œThe rise in the popularity of the avocado would not have been possible without trade with Mexico,โ€ according to the Times.

CNN (4/2/19) reported, โ€œThe United States gets nearly 90 percent of its avocado imports from Mexico,โ€ warning that โ€œthe US could run out of the trendy toast-topper in just three weeks.โ€

โ€œIf US/Mexico border closed, avocados would soon be toast, for starters,โ€ CBS News (4/1/19) warned.

In a piece headlined โ€œAvocado Shortages, Virgin Margaritas: Border Shutdown Would Hit American Palates,โ€ Steve Barnard, president and chief executive of Mission Produce, told Reuters (4/1/19):

You couldnโ€™t pick a worse time of year, because Mexico supplies virtually 100 percent of the avocados in the US right now. California is just starting and they have a very small crop, but theyโ€™re not relevant right now and wonโ€™t be for another month or so.

SFGateโ€™s tweet (4/1/19), โ€œAvocados could vanish in 3 weeks if U.S. closes Mexico border,โ€ prompted a rash of responses:

https://twitter.com/noahreservation/status/1112763646537428992

The food supply is, of course, not an unimportant concern. The avocado metric is โ€œa handy shorthand way of illustrating how an abstract issue like international trade actually affects peopleโ€™s lives day by day,โ€ William Reinsch of the Center for Strategic and International Studiesย toldย the Washington Postย (4/2/19). But itโ€™s a focus that allows journalists to tell the story of Trumpโ€™s border policies without addressing the human rights violations involved.

One of the most glaring examples of Trumpโ€™s immigration cruelty is the detainment of hundreds of migrants in a pen surrounded by chain-link fence and razor wire under the Paso del Norte bridge in El Paso, Texas. Asylum seekers were forced toย sleepย on gravel with only Mylar sheets in the cold, and subjected to otherย sleep deprivation tactics. The American Civil Liberties Union filed a complaint with the Department of Homeland Security and Customs and Border Protection officials, demanding an investigation.

Andre Segura, the legal director for the ACLU of Texas, condemned the practice (Newsweek, 4/2/19):

Locking up families with small children outside behind barbed wire fencing and forcing them to sleep in near-freezing temperatures is shocking even for an administration that has consistently developed cruel and inhumane immigration policies.

โ€œThe real crisis we must confront is that of the Trump administration violating the rights of those seeking refuge in our country,โ€ Segura added.

โ€œThe care of those in our custody is paramount,โ€ Border Patrolโ€™s Andrew Meehan said in a statement.

When theย Timesย (3/31/19)ย reportedย that people had been transferred from under the bridge, they didnโ€™t include the entire story. Debbie Nathan, reporter forย The Appeal, contradicted their account:

https://twitter.com/DebbieNathan2/status/1112479283535138816

The veteran border reporter followed up:

https://twitter.com/DebbieNathan2/status/1112524113317367809

Theย Timesโ€™ย deputy national editor, Kim Murphy, tweeted that the story had been updated because another part of the bridge was still being used to detain asylum seekers.

UPDATE: Border Patrol says it's transferring migrants from under Paso del Norte bridge to its El Paso Station. A second site on the other side of the bridge is still being used for processing. https://t.co/BBJvw3zQ7O

— Kim Murphy (@kimmurphy) March 31, 2019

The border patrol moved asylum seekers from under the bridge to other places. Some people have been released, but required to wear ankle monitors. Some people were moved to a parking lot that was even worse, a father from Honduras named Gustavo told Vice (4/2/19).

โ€œThe kids slept on top of our feetโ€”we were standing up, because we didnโ€™t fit,โ€ Gustavo said. โ€œYou couldnโ€™t see even one part of the floor. Just shoes and more shoes.โ€

His account offers a stark contrast to the frenzy over avocado prices.

โ€œThere were 1-year-olds,โ€ he said. โ€œThey took away their blankets and they threw them in the garbage. They took away their hats. The kids trembledโ€ฆ It was so cold. There wasnโ€™t anything to keep us warm.โ€


Featured image: Reuters depiction (4/1/19) of the kind of meal that would be threatened by an avocado shortage.

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Filed Under: Columnists Tagged With: Avocado, border, Corporate Media, immigration, Mexico

About FAIR

FAIR, the national media watch group, has been offering well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship since 1986. FAIR works with both activists and journalists. FAIR maintains a regular dialogue with reporters at news outlets across the country, providing constructive critiques when called for and applauding exceptional, hard-hitting journalism. FAIR also encourage the public to contact media with their concerns, to become media activists rather than passive consumers of news. (fair.org)

Comments

  1. otozon3 says

    April 11, 2019 at 9:15 PM

    I remember picking up fruits with my cousins in my aunt’s farm and attach the containers on the headache racks to secure it. I didn’t get angry when they didn’t leave some fruits for me to pick.

    I know avocado toast is good. But a lot of people are channeling their anger and concern towards topics that has lesser value. Are we really losing our humanity? The wall that the POTUS wants to build isn’t really an answer to the state’s problems on immigration

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