Jeanicia's Running Reality
This is where I'll lace up my thoughts and jog through the chaos of modern life. Whether I’m sprinting past social norms, dodging the latest trends, or taking a breather to reflect on the state of the world, you’ll find me here sharing unfiltered (and sometimes hilarious) takes on the issues that matter. Expect a mix of wit, wisdom, and the occasional rant—because life’s too short not to laugh while we tackle society's marathon together!
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Texas Under Greg Abbott: A Data-Driven Look at the State’s Biggest Failures
Friday, May 8, 2026
Where Democracy is Drawn
Thursday, May 7, 2026
How Newsrooms Amplify What They Could Contextualize
Saturday, May 2, 2026
America: Still Debugging the Voting System Since 1965
Monday, April 27, 2026
Projection, Polarization, and Political Violence: When Calls to “Tone It Down” Ignore the Loudest Voices
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Cages Over Communities: Where America’s Money Is Going
It usually starts as background noise.
A headline scrolls by about the border. A politician raises their voice on TV. Someone in a comment section says, “Finally, something is being done.” And if you don’t look too closely, it all feels straightforward—like a problem being met with a solution.
But the moment you stop and ask a quieter, more practical question—where is the money actually going—the entire picture begins to shift.
Because what’s happening in the United States right now isn’t just enforcement. It’s investment. Massive, deliberate, sustained investment into a system that is being built out in real time.
Over the past few years, tens of billions of dollars have been committed to immigration enforcement, with one major package alone setting aside roughly $45 billion specifically to expand detention capacity. That number isn’t about maintaining what already exists; it’s about growth—more facilities, more beds, more infrastructure designed to hold more people. Altogether, detention spending has climbed to around $14 billion per year, a figure that now exceeds what the federal government spends to operate the entire prison system.
That comparison is hard to ignore, not just because of the scale, but because of what it represents. The country is now spending more money detaining immigrants—many of whom have no criminal record—than it does incarcerating people convicted of federal crimes. And once you sit with that long enough, it becomes difficult to see it as a narrow policy choice. It starts to look like something structural.
What makes it even more real is how tangible the system has become. Across the country, ordinary buildings—empty warehouses, industrial spaces that could have been repurposed for housing or local economic use—are being converted into detention centers. The transformation is quiet but significant, turning spaces of potential growth into spaces of confinement, funded by public dollars that could just as easily have gone elsewhere.
At the same time, the cost of holding a single person in detention continues to add up in ways that are both predictable and staggering. On average, it costs about $166 per day to detain one individual. Over weeks and months, that figure compounds into thousands of dollars per person, multiplied across tens of thousands of detainees at any given time. This isn’t incidental spending—it’s a system that requires constant, high-volume funding to sustain itself.
That system is largely overseen by agencies like U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection, both of which have seen their budgets expand dramatically over the past two decades. What were once smaller enforcement bodies have evolved into multi-billion-dollar operations, reflecting not just an increase in activity but a shift in national priorities. Growth at that scale tends to reveal what a country is willing to invest in long-term, and here, the trajectory has been consistently upward.
And detention is only one part of the equation. What happens after—how people are removed from the country—adds another layer that is less visible but equally costly.
In many cases, deportation does not simply mean returning someone to their country of origin. Increasingly, migrants are being sent to third countries—places they are not from, and in some cases have no prior connection to—through complex international arrangements. The logistics of these transfers are not simple, and they are not cheap. Rather than relying solely on commercial flights, the government often uses privately chartered planes to carry out these removals, turning what might sound like a routine administrative step into a high-cost operation involving aviation contracts, security personnel, and coordination across multiple jurisdictions.
The image is striking when you pause long enough to picture it clearly: individuals being transported across borders on private aircraft, not back to where they came from, but to entirely different countries, at a cost that can reach tens of thousands of dollars per flight. When combined with the already substantial expenses of detention, processing, and legal oversight, the total cost per person grows significantly, creating a system where enforcement is not just strict, but extraordinarily expensive.
And this is where the story begins to loop back on itself, because every one of those dollars is drawn from the same pool that funds everything else. The same federal budget that supports detention centers and deportation flights is also responsible for infrastructure, education, healthcare, and public services that affect everyday life for millions of Americans.
Which raises a question that is less political than it is practical: what are we choosing to prioritize?
Because the needs elsewhere are not hypothetical. Roads and bridges across the country continue to age and deteriorate. Public schools in many districts remain underfunded. Healthcare costs are still one of the most persistent financial burdens facing American families. These are long-standing issues with well-documented solutions, most of which require exactly what is being spent so heavily elsewhere—large-scale, sustained investment.
Instead, that investment is being directed toward a system built around detention and removal, one that has grown not only in size but in permanence. A significant portion of it is operated by private companies, meaning that taxpayer money flows into contracts where the continuation—and expansion—of detention directly supports revenue. Over time, that creates a structure where growth becomes self-reinforcing, as capacity leads to usage, and usage justifies further capacity.
Seen from a distance, it begins to resemble less of a temporary response and more of an established industry.
And yet, despite the scale and the cost, public support for these policies remains strong in many circles. Part of that support comes from the sense that something decisive is being done, that action is being taken in a visible and immediate way. Enforcement is tangible; it produces images, numbers, and outcomes that are easy to point to. By contrast, investments in healthcare, education, or infrastructure tend to unfold slowly, often without the same sense of urgency or spectacle.
But budgets tell their own story, whether or not they are framed that way. They reveal priorities in their most concrete form, showing not what is promised, but what is actually funded.
And right now, those priorities are clear. The United States is committing vast resources to building and maintaining a system designed to detain and deport at scale, while many of the systems that directly improve quality of life remain underfunded or delayed.
If the idea of putting Americans first were reflected purely through spending, it would look different. It would show up in stronger schools, more reliable infrastructure, and a healthcare system that reduces, rather than creates, financial strain. Those outcomes require investment, just as enforcement does—but the distribution of that investment tells its own story.
In the end, following the money doesn’t just explain what is happening. It explains what matters.
And right now, what the numbers show is a country willing to spend billions building a system of detention and removal, even as the needs at home remain in plain sight, waiting for the same level of commitment.
Monday, April 13, 2026
Why “I Don’t Like It, So No One Should Read It” Is a Parenting Fallacy
Let’s get one thing straight: there is absolutely nothing wrong with a parent deciding a certain book isn’t right for their child. Maybe your kid is six and wants to read Game of Thrones, and you’re like, “Not today, tiny human. Let’s stick to Magic Tree House.” That is parenting. That is reasonable. That is not a problem.
The colossal problem arises when a parent says, “I don’t like this book…therefore, no child should be allowed to read it.” Suddenly, we’re in the land of the literary monarchy, where one person’s taste dictates what hundreds of thousands of other kids get to see. And trust me, the data says kids notice.
According to a 2021 survey by the American Library Association, over 60% of parents report restricting books in their home for their kids’ age or maturity. Fine. But here’s the kicker: books like Captain Underpants and Harry Potter regularly top the ALA’s “Most Challenged Books” list. Why? Because a small, vocal minority decided, “This is not for my child…therefore it must not be for anyone else either.” Meanwhile, kids across the country were discovering literacy, imagination, and the ability to stay up past their bedtime reading because of those same books.
And here’s an important nuance: a book can genuinely be inappropriate for one child of the same age but not another. Research in developmental psychology shows that children’s emotional maturity, prior experiences, and sensitivity to certain themes vary widely even within the same age group. For example, a story with intense conflict or scary situations may be exciting and manageable for one child but cause anxiety or nightmares for another. Cognitive development and empathy levels also differ, meaning one child might understand and process complex moral dilemmas, while another could misinterpret or become distressed. So, parental discretion absolutely has a role—but only for their own child.
Let’s talk about the comedy of it all. Take Captain Underpants—a story about two fourth graders hypnotizing their principal into wearing underwear on his head. Some parents called it “inappropriate” and “encouraging bad behavior.” Yet, those same parents were probably the ones who cheered when their kids wrote fart jokes in math class. The irony is so rich, it practically deserves a library card of its own.
Or consider Harry Potter. Banned in some school districts for “promoting witchcraft” (spoiler: it’s fiction). Meanwhile, kids are learning to read faster, grapple with themes of friendship and courage, and—statistically speaking—are more likely to visit a library as adults. According to Pew Research, people who read for fun in childhood are 50% more likely to be avid readers later in life. So banning Harry Potter for your child might feel protective, but banning it for everyone? That’s how we accidentally create a generation of reluctant readers.
This also opens up a teachable moment: if parents want to guide their kids toward age-appropriate books, they can do so by helping them learn decision-making skills and critical thinking. For instance, discussing why certain themes might be challenging, encouraging them to ask questions, and showing them how to choose books responsibly when they’re not under parental supervision. That way, children build the ability to self-regulate their reading choices instead of relying entirely on adult gatekeepers.
Here’s the takeaway: personal taste is subjective. Your kid might be fine skipping Holes or To Kill a Mockingbird until they’re older. That is entirely your prerogative. But insisting no other child should read it is a whole other level. That’s not protecting kids—that’s imposing personal bias under the guise of morality.
And let’s be real: the kids will notice. Nothing screams “rebellion” quite like being told a book is forbidden. There is evidence that the forbidden fruit effect is very real—even in literature. The Journal of Applied Social Psychology finds that when something is restricted, children (and adults) are more motivated to seek it out. So every time a parent says, “No one should read this,” somewhere a kid is sneaking a copy under their pillow, grinning like a tiny, justified anarchist.
So, fellow parents, guardians, and caretakers: protect your own child if you feel a book isn’t appropriate. That is reasonable, responsible, and frankly, smart. But don’t pretend your taste in literature is a universal moral compass. Because in the end, books are bigger than our opinions, and imagination doesn’t need a parental veto. And if you’re teaching kids how to pick books for themselves, remember: guiding them to think critically will matter far more than banning a single story ever could.
