The crisis in United States immigration detention centers is no different. ProPublica's audio of sobbing children, separated from their parents and locked in cages, drew outcries when the outlet published it in June 2018. But a year later, news of deaths in ICE custody hardly gets a reaction from the public at large: earlier this month, only about 15 people attended a protest at ICE headquarters in San Francisco following the untimely passing of detained trans woman Johana Medina Leon.

Chicago rapper and singer Vic Mensa and his new band 93PUNX hope to draw attention back to the 13,000 immigrant children currently in U.S. immigration detention—five of whom have died in custody within the last two years, and over 4,500 of whom have reported sexual abuse in the last four years. The band's new pop punk single "Camp America" riffs on ICE Deputy Director Matthew Albance's (ridiculous) comparison of detention centers to summer camps. In a faux cheery voice reminiscent of Billy Joe Armstrong on Green Day's American Idiot, Mensa sings, "So much fun, you lose count of the days / Playing hide and go seek inside of your cage / Daddy loves you, so he sent you away / to Camp America."