Washington Post (Op-Ed)
By David Gushee
October 9, 2015
Some
of this year’s crop of politicians tell us that illegal or undocumented
immigrants pose a deadly threat to our country. I say that
anti-immigrant rhetoric is the
more dangerous threat. It has been deadly before, here and in other
countries. It can easily become deadly again.
You can watch the rhetorical escalation up the ladder — or down the slippery slope, choose your metaphor — toward danger.
Step
one: It is perfectly reasonable for those concerned about illegal
immigration to express concern about our nation’s ability to secure its
borders, especially from
those who might pose a real threat. As one who regularly waits in lines
to pass through border controls, I get it. In a nation-state world,
borders matter. All nations attempt to secure their borders. The United
States has a right and a need to secure its
borders.
Step
two: It is also perfectly reasonable to be concerned about potential
economic impacts of illegal immigration. It is reasonable to fear the
creation of a job market
for undocumented immigrants that can undercut employment for American
citizens. It is reasonable to fear a drain on government social services
or health care spending. Of course, if research demonstrated that
undocumented immigrants do not create more unemployment
or cost more than they contribute to tax dollars, this would resolve
the concern.
Step
three: It is debatable whether it is reasonable to be concerned that
undocumented immigrants pose a threat to American culture or the
predominant use of the English
language. The reasonableness of such concerns relates entirely to our
vision of America. What kind of country are we or should we be? A
“white” country, or a multiracial country? A predominantly or
exclusively English-speaking country, or a polyglot nation?
A European-colonial-descendant nation, or a multiethnic nation with
people coming from all parts of the world? To opponents of (illegal, and
sometimes legal) immigration, I say that if this is your concern, say
it loud and plain, and let us debate the matter.
Step
four: It is not debatable but abhorrent to express concern that
undocumented immigrants as a group are dangerous and morally inferior.
This, of course, was assumed
in Donald Trump’s infamous comment earlier this year: “When Mexico
sends its people, they’re not sending their best. . They’re sending
people that have lots of problems. . They’re bringing drugs. They’re
bringing crime. They’re rapists. And some, I assume,
are good people.”
Notwithstanding
the slight caveat at the end, this comment dismisses Mexican (and
surely not just Mexican) immigrants, as a group, in a very dangerous
way. It invites
all “non-Mexicans” to look at all “Mexicans” in a demeaning way and to
treat them accordingly. Citizenship status gradually melts away here as
the central issue. It is skin color and assumed ethnicity and
nationality that is the problem. And some evidence
is coming in that brown-skinned, Hispanic, or “Mexican-looking” people
face routine and even escalating dehumanization and degrading treatment
today. A spirit is abroad in the land that goes far beyond one
candidate..
It
is a proven pattern: When one group of people in a country is taught to
look at another group of people in that country as inferior, immoral,
and dangerous, the latter
group will eventually pay a huge price. All kinds of indignities,
discrimination, and violence can be expected. Need I cite examples?
So
we have reason to be concerned about illegal immigration. But right now
we ought to be more concerned about campaign rhetoric inflaming racial,
ethnic, and nationalist
fears in some very dangerous ways. All of us need to be on our guard
against it.
(Rev.
David Gushee is Distinguished University Professor of Christian Ethics
and Director of the Center for Theology and Public Life at Mercer
University. He is the author
or editor of 20 books, including “Righteous Gentiles of the Holocaust,”
‘’Kingdom Ethics,” ‘’The Sacredness of Human Life,” and “Changing Our
Mind.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com



No comments:
Post a Comment