"So sue me."
— President Obama, complaining about Republican leaders
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We're not sure who would be spurred into action by the hectoring lectures recently from the president of the United States along the lines of, "I'm right, you should know better." Maybe his kids. Certainly not the Republican members of Congress.
Americans who aren't fierce Republican or Democratic partisans probably rolled their eyes at this display — if they haven't completely tuned out Washington's bimodal distrust and contempt.
Problem is, right now, that mutual distrust and contempt hampers a national response to an urgent humanitarian crisis involving thousands of children.
Nearly 40,000 unaccompanied children from Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras have been apprehended by the U.S. Border Patrol after sneaking across the Mexican-U.S. border in the past year. They've mainly come via smugglers, a harrowing journey that puts the kids in extreme danger. Once here, the children are picked up and held in government shelters until they can be released to family members or foster care. Eventually, they get hearings, or perhaps they just fade illegally into communities. This is part of a huge immigration mess that needs fixing.
But the plight of the Central American children should be considered separately — as a refugee crisis. Parents are handing over their kids, some as young as 4, to criminals, in the mistaken belief that U.S. immigration rules have been eased and they'll formally be allowed to stay here. So added to an extreme backlog of immigration cases are thousands more involving unaccompanied children, who must be cared for by an overburdened federal bureaucracy untrained for the task.