Eagle Pass, Texas was once a bustling border town families, shops, life. Now it’s lined with razor wire and silent patrols.
Since the National Guard was deployed in full force, the town’s population has dropped. Restaurants are closing. And the few left behind say they live in fear not from migrants, but from the militarization of their own streets.
They check my ID to buy groceries, said one elderly woman. I was born here. Some call it necessary. Others call it martial law in slow motion. But no one calls it home anymore.
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