Feb. 1, 2017 As long as illegal immigration is permitted, the foundations of American culture are at risk.

Similar documents
During World War II, the U.S. government ordered 120,000

Japanese Internment Timeline

US HISTORY DBQ: JAPANESE INTERNMENT

Wartime and the Bill of Rights: The Korematsu Case

Trump, Taiwan and an Uproar

Why were Japanese-Americans interned during WWII?

Japanese Internment Timeline

The Strategic Context of the Paris Attacks

Regime Change and Globalization Fuel Europe s Refugee and Migrant Crisis

Try to answer the following question using the documents on the following pages. Why were the Japanese interned in camps during WWII?

Japanese Internment Timeline

CREATING THE U.S. RACIAL ORDER DYNAMIC 3: IMMIGRATION

Paris, Sharm el-sheikh and the Resurrection of Old Europe

Safeguarding Equality

President-Elect Donald Trump

Part I: Where are we today?

Germany and the Failure of Multiculturalism

The Dutch Elections and the Looming Crisis

FDR AND JAPANESE AMERICAN INTERNMENT

NATO and the United States

Document B: The Munson Report

Japanese-American Internment Camps: Imprisoned in their Own Country

The Largest mass movement in Human History - From 1880 to 1921, a record-setting 23 million immigrants arrived on America s shores in what one

Topic Page: Immigration in the United States

Democratizing the Enemy: The Japanese American Internment. Brian Masaru Hayashi (2004)

The Real Issue Behind the Border Wall Debate

lived in this land for SF Bay Before European migration million+ Native peoples. Ohlone people who first to U.S = home to 10 Area.

Lyndon B. Johnson s signing of the Immigration Act of 1965 marked the shift in the

our immigrant and refugee residents can fully participate in and be integrated into the

Introduction to World War II By USHistory.org 2017

AMERICA S GLOBAL IMAGE REMAINS MORE POSITIVE THAN CHINA S BUT MANY SEE CHINA BECOMING WORLD S LEADING POWER

Plessy versus Ferguson (1896) Jim Crow Laws. Reactions to Brown v Board. Brown versus the Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas (1954)

CIVIL RIGHTS 2017 ANNUAL REPORT

Chapter Introduction Section 1 Immigration Section 2 Urbanization. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides.

The Immigration Debate: Historical and Current Issues of Immigration 2003, Constitutional Rights Foundation

Originally published at:

What the Paris Agreement Doesn t Say About US Power

From: John Halpin, Center for American Progress Karl Agne, GBA Strategies

Written Testimony of

Students majoring in International Relations are required to take ONE course from each of the following fields:

Executive Order 9066: Unjustified. Lanz Domingo

Immigrants and Urbanization: Immigration. Chapter 15, Section 1

Asian American Perspective on Comprehensive Immigration Reform

Changes in immigration law and discussion of readings from Guarding the Golden Door.

Walls or Roads. James Petras. History is told by Walls and Roads which have marked significant turning points

Write the letter of the description that does NOT match the name or term.

Podcast 60 - Multicultural Australia

World War II Exam One &

World War II ( ) Lesson 5 The Home Front

CHINA IN THE WORLD PODCAST. Host: Paul Haenle Guest: Erik Brattberg. March 13, 2018

FREEDOM AND DIGNITY PROJECT Learning Experience Module Michael Brown & Jeff Kaiser

CHAPTER 3: MIGRATION. Key Issue Three: Why do migrants face obstacles?

Elections and Obama's Foreign Policy

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION

Notes from Europe s Periphery

World War II Home Front

America after WWII. The 1946 through the 1950 s

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION

Vietnam War or the Chinese Cultural Revolution in China. I personally have a very limited

History Skill Builder. Making Relevant Connections

Trump's travel ban on Muslims leads to widespread protests, legal action

Conference Against Imperialist Globalisation and War

WWI: A National Emergency -Committee on Public Information headed by George Creel -Created propaganda media aimed to weaken the Central Powers

Focus Canada Winter 2018 Canadian public opinion about immigration and minority groups

Georgia High School Graduation Test Tutorial. World History from World War I to World War II

The Gathering Storm. The Gathering Storm. The Gathering Storm

By 2025, only 58 percent of the U.S. population is projected to be white down from 86 percent in 1950.

Konrad Raiser Berlin, February 2011

China and Hong Kong s Status Quo

1). The INVASION of America

All throughout my life I had been following the aspirations, dreams, and wants of

Involvement of Press, Documentary, and Propaganda in the Japanese American. Internment during World War II

THE PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF CURRENT IMMIGRATION POLICY AND SENTIMENT. Usha Tummala-Narra, Ph.D. Lynch School of Education Boston College

BETWEEN INCOMPTENCE AND CULPABILITY:

Chapter 12 Section 3 Indian Nationalism Grows. Essential Question: How did Gandhi and the Congress party work for independence in India?

Pakistan Elections 2018: Imran Khan and a new South Asia. C Raja Mohan 1

IN-CLASS INTRODUCTION. Literary Intro. Historical Info

History of immigration to the United States

2. Why did the U.S. enter World War I and why was neutrality so difficult to

APUSH WORLD WAR II REVIEWED!

THE EARLY COLD WAR YEARS. US HISTORY Chapter 15 Section 2

THE COMING OF WORLD WAR II

LWV New Mexico Immigration Study

asian diasporic visual cultures and the americas 3 (2017) Artist Pages

The Roots of Hillary Clinton s Foreign Policy

AMERICA AND THE WORLD. Chapter 13 Section 1 US History

In Every Generation: Descendants Carry on the Work

Assessment: The Great Wave of Immigration

THEORIES OF ASSIMILATION - LeMay Ch. 2

TEACHER S PET PUBLICATIONS. LitPlan Teacher Pack for Farewell To Manzanar based on the book by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston & James D.

Voices of Immigrant and Muslim Young People

Background on the Trump Administration Executive Orders on Immigration

Beyond Categorical Thinking

An American Recession and the World

Was the decision by the Canadian government to evacuate Japanese Canadians justified? Historical Perspective

EOC Preparation: WWII and the Early Cold War Era

National Latino Survey Sept 2017

Huddled Masses: Public Opinion & the 1965 US Immigration Act

United States Migration Patterns (International and Internal)

Articles Lecture. Week Three

Transcription:

Immigration Chaos Feb. 1, 2017 As long as illegal immigration is permitted, the foundations of American culture are at risk. By George Friedman Last week, President Donald Trump temporarily blocked both immigrants and nonimmigrants from seven predominantly Muslim countries from entering the United States. From the beginning of his presidential campaign he has spoken at various times and in a variety of ways of taking a step like this. Having done it, the action created uproar in part because it was done without adequate preparation, and in larger part, because it was done at all. The mutual recriminations over this particular act are of little consequence. What is important is to try to understand why the immigration issue is so sensitive. The uproar over Trump s action is merely one of many to come, which also will be of little consequence. Trump has pointed to two very different patterns. One is immigration to the U.S. by Muslims. The other is illegal Mexican immigration. Both resonated with Trump s supporters. It is interesting to consider other immigration patterns that have not become an issue. One is immigration to the U.S. from India. The other is immigration from China and other parts of Asia. Both have been massive movements since about 1970, and both have had substantial social consequences. 1 / 5

Protesters gather at the Los Angeles International Airport s Tom Bradley Terminal to demonstrate against President Donald Trump s executive order effectively banning citizens from seven Muslim-majority countries. KONRAD FIEDLER/AFP/Getty Images Indian migration to the U.S. has been one of the most successful in American history in that it has been among the least disruptive, has generated minimal hostility and has been extraordinarily successful economically. Today, Indian-Americans are the wealthiest single ethnic group in the United States. They are hardly invisible, as they are present in all professions and as corporate executives. Chinese and East Asian immigration is more complex. Chinese immigrants began coming to the U.S. in the mid-19th century. They came as laborers supplied by Chinese contractors and were crucial in building American railroads alongside and in competition with Irish immigrants. The Chinese were exploited and brutalized and didn t get citizenship. But after the 1970s, their story matched the Indians the Chinese were not quite as wealthy, but they did well. About 3.7 million people of Indian descent live in the U.S., many of them second-generation immigrants. About 4 million people of Chinese descent live in the U.S., with somewhat more complex backgrounds. There also are 3.3 million Muslims and 35.8 million people of Mexican 2 / 5

descent, including an estimated 5.2 million of the 11 million who are in the U.S. illegally, according to Pew Research Center. If there was a strain of intense, anti-immigrant or racist sentiment in the United States, it would be directed against Indians and Chinese just as much as Muslims and Mexicans. There would also be a persistent strain from previous Irish immigration in the 19th century, and of Italians, Jews and other Eastern and Southern Europeans who flooded into the United States between 1880 and 1920. To the extent that racism exists against any of these groups, the antiimmigration fervor is marginal; century-old immigrant cohorts have become mainstream. They are not the ones marginalized their detractors are. It is the example of the Chinese and the Indians that blows up the theory that Americans have an overarching anti-immigrant sensibility that Trump is tapping into. It also raises serious doubts that Trump is anti-immigrant. I have searched and may have missed it, but I didn t find that Trump made anti-chinese or anti-indian statements, as opposed to anti-muslim and anti-mexican statements. If it were classic anti-immigrant sentiment, the rage would be against Indian immigrants who have emerged as a powerful and wealthy ethnic group in a startlingly short time. But there is minimally detectable hostility toward them, which means that the immigration situation in the United States is far more complex than it seems. The issue is not whether Trump and his followers are generally anti-immigrant. The question is why they are so hostile toward Muslims, who roughly total the same number as the Chinese and Indians, and to Mexicans, who vastly outnumber these groups. I wish the explanation were more complex, but it is actually quite simple in both cases. The United States has been at war with Muslim groups since Sept. 11, 2001. When the U.S. has gone to war with foreign powers, there has been a surge of hostility toward immigrants from that foreign power s country. During World War I, German immigrants in the United States who still spoke German came under suspicion and were pressured to adopt English. During World War II, Germans who had maintained close and cordial ties to Germany prior to the war were harassed, and in some cases, arrested under suspicion of espionage and subversion. Japanese citizens of the United States were arrested and sent to detention camps out of fear that they might be conducting espionage or sabotage for the Japanese. During the Cold War, post-war émigrés from Soviet satellite nations were distrusted by the FBI, which feared they were sent by the Soviets as spies and saboteurs. When there is war, there is suspicion of the enemy. When there is suspicion of the enemy, there is fear that émigrés might be in the United States on false pretenses. Historically, émigrés have been caught in the middle to some extent because their loyalty is questioned. In war, there is rage as the casualties mount, particularly if sabotage and terrorism are carried out in the homeland. This is hardly new or difficult to understand. If those of us old enough to recall the terror after 9/11 will do so, we can remember the fear and uncertainty not only about what 3 / 5

comes next, but also whether the next terror team already was present in the United States. After 15 years of war and many Americans dead, this has congealed into a framework of distrust that may well go beyond the rational. The detention of the entire Japanese community was not rational. Nor was it something that cannot be understood. It is hard to calibrate what you ought to be afraid of in war, but you know that something dreadful might happen. Are all Muslims warriors against the United States? No. Do you know who is or isn t? Also no. Wars, therefore, create fears. There is nothing new in the American fear of Muslims in the context of war. The Mexican situation is different. There was a war, but it was long ago, and fear of war is not the driving issue. Rather, the driving issue is illegal Mexican immigration. There is a great deal of homage paid to the rule of law. Congress passed a law specifying the mechanics of legal migration. Some 5 million Mexicans broke the law. Whether this has harmed the U.S. economy or not, the indifference to enforcing the law by people who are normally most insistent on the rule of law has created a sense of hypocrisy. At the same time that the middle and lower-middle classes feel as though their interests are being ignored, the presentation of illegal aliens as undocumented immigrants reveals a linguistic maneuver. The illegals are transformed into the merely undocumented, implying a minor bureaucratic foul-up. The anger is not only directed at the Mexicans. It is part of the rage against those living in the bubble, who present themselves as humanitarians, but who will encounter the illegal aliens, if at all, as their servants. And rightly or wrongly, some suspect that open support for breaking the law is designed to bring cheap labor to support the lifestyles of the wealthy at the expense of the declining middle class. The fact that the well-to-do tend to be defenders of illegal aliens while also demanding the rule of law increases suspicions. There is a somewhat deeper layer. As long as illegal immigration is permitted, the foundations of American culture are at risk. It is not simply immigration, but the illegality that is frightening, because it not only can t be controlled, but also the law is under attack by those who claim to uphold it. The fear that a person s livelihood is being undermined and his cultural foundation is being overwhelmed creates deep fear of the intentions of the more powerful. The issue appears to have little to do with NAFTA and other economic concerns. The U.S. and China have equally intense economic issues, but there is minimal tension over Chinese immigration. The economic and immigration issues seem only tenuously connected. It is rare that an issue of such emotional impact as Muslims during a war with Muslims, or immigration in violation of the law, would not cause tension. As we saw with President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Japanese, things that are obvious to those living decades later are not obvious at the time. Indeed, it is a failure of imagination to be unable to empathize with the fear felt after Pearl Harbor. In our time, the failure to empathize comes from those who feel immune to illegal immigration or the 15-year war. It is part of the growing fragmentation of American society that different classes and regions should experience these things so differently, and that 4 / 5

Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) each side has so little understanding of the other. It is the president s job to bridge the gap. But regardless of his wishes, the president is trapped by the upwelling of feeling on questions of immigration by Muslims at a time of war, or the refusal of government at all levels to enforce the law. But what is not true is that this represents a generalized hostility to immigrants or even racism. If it did, the Indian and the Chinese immigration in recent generations would have encountered a very different greeting. This issue is about two groups. The response may well be extreme and clumsy. But after many years of ignoring the anxiety that both issues generated, or dismissing it as racism, it inevitably ratchets out of control. In fact, neither issue is mysterious, unprecedented or subject to cautious management, given the passions on all sides. 5 / 5