By prosecuting all adults who crossed the border illegally, the government deliberately manufactured a situation where thousands of children were forcibly torn from their mothers and fathers and placed into state care.
The subsequent use of specialized facilities, euphemistically termed "tender age" shelters, did not mitigate the harm; rather, it institutionalized the dehumanizing effects of family separation.
The Architecture of Trauma: Separation as AbuseThe core harm of this policy was the forced separation itself, an act recognized by child development experts and human rights organizations as a form of abuse. Biological Harm: When an infant is separated, their hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis—the body's central stress response system—is activated. Sustained activation of this system, without the soothing presence of a parent, can lead to chronic elevations of cortisol (a stress hormone).
This toxic stress can disrupt developing neural pathways, potentially leading to long-term issues with emotional regulation, learning, and physical health.
Infants and Toddlers (The "Tender Age"): Children in this age group, defined as being under five, are entirely dependent on their primary caregivers for safety, regulation, and emotional development. The sudden, violent rupture of this attachment bond triggers a toxic stress response in the child’s brain. Dehumanizing Environment: Placing these highly vulnerable, distressed children in large institutional settings, no matter how "clean" or "licensed," failed to address their most fundamental need: their parent.
Doctors and lawyers who visited the facilities reported seeing: Babies Crying Inconsolably: Infants who had been traumatized by separation were described as crying hysterically and exhibiting extreme distress.
Children Lashing Out: Toddlers were observed acting out, refusing to eat, or lying on the floor, exhibiting classic signs of acute emotional distress and despair.
Shelter Life: An Institutionalized Nightmare These "tender age" facilities became sites where children experienced the deepest forms of emotional neglect stemming from the state-sanctioned trauma.
Lack of Parental Comfort: No number of state-employed caretakers can replace the unique, bonded comfort of a parent. The children were surrounded by strangers, often unable to communicate their fear or needs due to language barriers and their young age.
This environment became a horrifying symbol of their abandonment.
Stripping Identity: The separation stripped these children of their identity not only as individuals but as part of a family unit. Their parents were reduced to numbers in a court system, and the children themselves became wards of the state, removed from their cultural and linguistic context, and warehoused until a complicated, delayed reunification process could begin. This process was inherently dehumanizing.The policy and the resulting use of "tender age" shelters inflicted deliberate and immense psychological pain on children, violating fundamental human rights and leaving a permanent, indelible scar on the lives of these innocent victims.