In a conversation like that, i ask follow up questions and ask what exactly people feel like they saw or heard that was unrepresentative. In writing tis story, how do i figure out the appropriate level of severity? I mean, i tend to stick to first person accounts. And i don't think that the media exaggerated family separations,. It's just that the facts were really disturbing - not just to democrats, who the trump administration was used to being criticized by, but also to their own party.
Caitlin Dickerson is a staff writer for The Atlantic covering immigration. Her latest article, on the secret history of U.S. government’s family-separation policy, is ”An American Catastrophe.”
“Interviewing separated families, I’ve found, is just on a whole other scale of pain and trauma. I’ve watched people have really intense PTSD flashbacks in front of me. I never wanted to risk asking a family to open up in that way if I didn’t know that I’d be able to use that material. The worst thing you can do is waste someone’s time in a way that causes them pain.”
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