Time, on its own, doesnāt assuage racism. White power concedes nothing without a vigorous fight, and the fantasy that racism is a problem that can just be waited out is an absolute delusion. Thatās part of Americaās problem: it continually asks black and brown people to sit tight, stand down, never gripe or protest, and naively hope that a country that has repeatedly betrayed and abused them will miraculously do the right thing. Thatās whatās happening with DACA right now, and the frustration of watching this familiar scene play out is maddening.
The DACA fight, including the 60-hour recent government shutdown, has been about racism from day one. Donald Trumpās well-documentedĀ white supremacist bonafidesĀ dating back to hisĀ discriminatory real estate practices in the 1970sĀ are legion, and the evidence has come fast and furious over the last two years. There was the launch of his presidential bid with a speech that cast all Mexicans as criminals, the judge he insultedĀ based solely on his Mexican heritage, his promise to his supporters to enact policies specifically designed to hurt people of color, and his sympathizing with the āvery fine [group of] peopleā who murdered an anti-racism protester. By the time word leaked that Trump had moaned about immigrants from āshithole countries,ā the statement only confirmed what was obvious. Trump believes DACA allows shithole-caliber black and brown people to live in this country at a moment he is desperately trying to Make America Aryan Again, apparently with a huge influx of Norwegians.
Trump isnāt alone in this effort, he’s backed by a White House full of racist xenophobes. Senior Trump staffer Stephen Miller has a record of anti-immigrant racism that dates back to junior high school, whenĀ he reportedly unfriended a schoolmateĀ for being Latino, and his undergrad days at Duke University, where he railed against āmulticulturalismāĀ and hung out with notoriously punchable Nazi Richard Spencer. The first hint that White House Chief of Staff John Kelly might be a racist was his willingness work for Trump. Since taking the job, he hasĀ solidified his stance by singing Robert E. Lee‘s praises, defending monuments to the Confederacy, and promoting the idea that slavery wasn’t such a bad institution if you just get into the mindset of white slaveownersĀ (and John Kelly, apparently). He has also been relentless in advancing this administration’s xenophobic goals. āIn just six months, Kelly turned [the Department of Homeland Security]Ā into a deportation machineā notes the the Nationās Julianne Hing, ātranslat[ing] much of Trumpās brazen anti-immigrant campaign rhetoric into actual policy.”
Jemele Hill rightfully said that āTrump is a white supremacistĀ who has largely surrounded himself with other white supremacists,ā and itās important to note that circle extends to the wider GOP. The Republican political party, with far greater transparency than in any other modern period, is a white supremacist safe space. There are too many open racists to highlight them all: from Tom Cotton, who blocked a black woman’s ambassadorship untilĀ she died of cancer to “inflict special pain” on Obama; to Steve King, who once claimed that for every immigrant “whoās a valedictorian, thereās another 100 out there thatāthey weigh 130 pounds andĀ theyāve got calves the size of cantaloupesĀ because theyāre hauling 75 pounds of marijuana across the desert.ā Even those who don’t shout their racism swaddle it well-worn dog whistles such as “Chicago,” “law and order” and, per Paul Ryan,Ā allusions to “inner city…culture problems.”Ā It’s impossible to consider the rest, who are all complicit in aiding Trumpism, anything other than extremist.
That extremism was highly visible during this shutdown, as the president and GOP jointly exploited white fears and resentments around immigration, cynically portraying Dreamers’ very existence as a creeping problem and potential criminal threat. Department of Justice head Jeff Sessions, an O.G. among racists, bothered to put together a report of intentionally misleading information to jerry-rig aĀ connection between immigration and terrorism. The Trump reelection campaign also created an ad thatĀ attempted to link Dreamers with murder and lawlessness, and suggested Democratsā efforts to protect them made the party potential accessories to murder. Fox News, essentially the media arm of this administration, helped out by prominently featuringĀ an article about the MS-13 gang as the shutdownĀ entered its third day. āMS-13 wants to send ‘younger, more violent offenders’ to the US, officials say,ā the headline read, ticking off a bunch of boxes intended to bring Dreamers to mind.
Greg Sargent of the Washington Post noticed a pattern:
Trump and Republicans have pivoted toĀ falsifying the real cause of the shutdownĀ by bashing Democrats for closing down the government to protect ‘illegal immigrants.’ This is a dramatic swing toward portraying dreamers as nothing more than lawbreakers ā toward lumping in the dreamers with the broader undocumented population, which Trump has tarred with all kinds of lies about immigrantsĀ committing crime,Ā harming low-skilled U.S. workersĀ andĀ perpetrating terrorism. Is this the real GOP view?Ā As Brian Beutler points out, the legislative history here does betray sustained GOP treatment of the Dreamers in precisely these terms. Or,Ā as David Bier puts it, House Republicans cannot ‘accept Dreamers as Americans’ and view them only as ‘criminals on parole.’
Republicans’ insistence on labeling human beings “illegal” is obviously dehumanizing: people aren’t illegal, actions are. But beyond the gross language, there’s a sleight of hand at work. The Trump adminstration announced plans to end DACA in September, affecting the status of more than 800,000 Dreamers and is now attempting to weaponize that status against those same young immigrants. The same is true ofĀ 200,000 SalvadoransĀ andĀ 60,000 HaitiansĀ whose Temporary Protected Status the Trump administration is ending.Ā (There’s beenĀ no discussion of the 50,000 undocumentedĀ Irish immigrants currently living in this country, and we can all guess why.) Numerous Republicans have claimed for months that they hoped to protect Dreamers from deportion, but instead used them as a bargaining chip and fear-stoking tool when given the opportunity. The willingness to throw out every stereotype and see what sticks, to risk a tally of $1.5 billion a day in shutdown costs,Ā points to just how intense the GOP’s anti-DACAĀ and overall anti-immigrant campaign is. Trump’s dumb wall, calls to end the diversity visa lottery, vast increase in deportationsĀ andĀ plans to rip immigrant families apartāthese are the policies of an administration trying to roll back time. Specifically to before1965, when the Immigration and Nationality Act overturned some of America’s racist immigration prohibitions.
As all this political theater and racist politicking plays out, Dreamers and other immigrants remain in anxiety-inducing limbo. The Senate Democrats who agreed to the deal that ended the shutdown and funds the government through early February must recognize what they’re up against. While Chuck Schumer et al managed to get a six-year CHIP extension, they gained no ground on behalf of Dreamers, even after giving in on billions in funding for that ridiculous border wall. McConnell has promised to take up the issue again, but he is not, by a stretch, a politician known for his superior honesty. Too, thereās pretty much no reason to believe the GOP will get sufficiently less bigoted in the next 16 days to produce a decent immigration bill. ThatĀ basically guarantees we’ll be facing another shutdown in roughly two weeks. The same racism will be the unspoken subtext, but the fight is likely to be longer and more vicious. That is, if Democrats manage to keep their spines in working order.
In other words, hope for the best and protest to stop the worst.
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