🌊 Don’t Turn Your Back on a Wave
Alligator Alcatraz Is Not Just a U.S. Problem — It’s a Global Public Health Emergency
By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita
As Canadians, we often look south and shake our heads at the chaos, but this time, it’s different. This isn’t just political. It’s not just about broken systems or partisan cruelty. It’s about raw sewage, infectious disease, collapsing ecosystems, and people — human beings — being warehoused in swamp tents surrounded by filth, insects, and contaminated water.
The site is being called Alligator Alcatraz — a migrant detention facility hastily erected on swampland in the Florida Everglades. But what’s happening there is far beyond any nickname. It is, by all scientific and humanitarian measures, a public health time bomb.
🚨 No Toilets. No Showers. No Safety.
Reports are flooding out now:
- Overflowing toilets and sewage running across the floor
- Worms found in rice and spoiled food served to detainees
- People not allowed to shower or change their underwear for days
- No air circulation in tents during heatwaves
- Swarms of mosquitoes, crickets, frogs, and biting flies
- People sick, dizzy, fainting, and still detained in these inhumane conditions
And the worst part? Officials admit they have nowhere to put the poop.
💀 It’s Not Just Gross — It’s Deadly
This isn’t just uncomfortable or unsanitary. It’s lethal. In this environment, you create a perfect storm for disease outbreaks — the kind of diseases the world hasn’t seen in decades. Here’s what can happen — and in some cases, already is:
- Hookworm infections from walking barefoot on feces-soaked soil
- Trench foot, open sores, gangrene from wet, toxic floors
- Cholera and typhoid from water contaminated by raw sewage
- Legionnaires’ disease from mist and standing water
- Leptospirosis from rat urine in floodwaters
- Tuberculosis and respiratory disease from overcrowded tents
- West Nile and dengue fever from mosquito swarms
- Skin infections, scabies, and staph from constant filth
This is not theory. These diseases are known to emerge in disaster zones, refugee camps, and war-torn slums. The U.S. government is knowingly creating those same conditions on protected wetland, in violation of environmental law, with zero regard for the consequences.
🌍 It Won’t Stay Contained
Viruses and bacteria don’t recognize borders. Neither do mosquitoes or swamp water runoff. A major outbreak of cholera or Legionnaires’ near Miami, in the Florida heat, would not stay in Florida. This is a global risk.
And while the migrants inside Alligator Alcatraz are being treated as expendable, what’s growing inside that camp could impact millions if even one pathogen breaks out and spreads. This is how pandemics start.
⚖️ Violations of Law & Humanity
The construction of Alligator Alcatraz bypassed federal environmental review, trampled over the rights of the Miccosukee Tribe, and violates the Clean Water Act and Endangered Species Act. Lawsuits have already been filed.
But lawsuits are slow. And diseases don’t wait.
This camp should never have been opened — not here, not like this, not under these conditions. And now that it is, every hour it remains operational increases the threat to both the people inside and the world outside.
📢 The WHO Must Act. The CDC Must Speak. The UN Must Investigate.
This is no longer just a domestic policy issue. It’s a matter of global health security.
We need:
- Immediate shutdown of Alligator Alcatraz
- Emergency sanitation response and safe relocation of detainees
- Independent international inspection of the site
- Urgent disease surveillance and outbreak prevention protocols
💔 You Can’t Say You Didn’t Know
We are watching history being written — not in silence, but in neglect.
The warning signs are all there. This wave is swelling. We either act now — or watch another human-made disaster unfold in slow motion.
And when it does, we won’t be able to say it came out of nowhere.
✍️ SHARE & TAG:
Call out the silence. Demand action. Tag:
- @WHO (World Health Organization)
- @UNHumanRights
- @CDCgov
- @UN_News_Centre
- Environmental journalists
- Public health experts
- Local media and activists
Don’t turn your back on a wave.
Because once it breaks, it’s already too late.
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