The Week (Opinion)
By Gwenda Blair
October 19, 2015
When
Donald Trump declared his candidacy for president at Trump Tower on
June 16, the real kickoff wasn't the actual announcement ("I am
officially running") but his remarks
on immigration. "The U.S. has become a dumping ground for everybody
else's problems," he said, and then went on to denounce Mexican
immigrants as criminals, drug dealers, and rapists. "We have no
protection and we have no competence, we don't know what's happening.
And it's got to stop and it's got to stop fast."
Fact
checkers squawked. They pointed out that net immigration from Mexico is
now zero, if not negative (that is, the number of people returning to
Mexico from the U.S.
is at least as great as the number of new arrivals), and that there are
now more arrivals from Asia than from Latin America.
When
questioned, Trump refused to back down. Instead he accelerated,
pointing to a handful of criminal acts by undocumented immigrants as a
virtual crime wave. Trump has
since widened his scope of attack on immigrants by saying on Face The
Nation that Syrian refugees may be "the greatest Trojan horse" — that
is, there may be terrorists among them — and should be steered away from
American shores.
But
fact checkers aren't Trump's intended audience. He's targeting the mass
of disaffected, angry, and largely white voters who feel that
immigrants have stolen their
jobs, their sense of security, and their self-respect. These voters are
looking for someone to get things back on track, to bring back "their"
America — and poll after poll shows that they like the Knight on a White
Horse message Trump is delivering.
Trump's
anti-immigrant rant and follow-up pledge to deport all undocumented
immigrants and their families have proved a shrewd campaign tactic. But
as I learned while
writing a book about him, his father, and his grandfather, despite
Trump's repeated claim to "tell it like it is," he has often failed to
do so with regard to his own family's immigrant past.
Like
most Americans, Donald Trump comes from immigrant stock, and as in most
families, their story is a complicated one, with many chapters. But
during Trump's anti-immigrant
tirades, he failed to mention even such basics as the fact that his
mother, Mary Anne McLeod Trump, was born in Scotland, that he is named
after a Scotsman (a maternal uncle), and that he has boasted of his tie
to this foreign country repeatedly when publicizing
his golf courses there.
More
important, his black-and-white denunciations give no hint that his
financial empire traces its origins back to the shrewdness with which
his grandfather, Friedrich
Trump, finagled his way around the rough-and-tumble New World after
emigrating from the small German village of Kallstadt. The year was
1885, and Friedrich, who was only 16 when he landed in New York City,
belonged to a wave of German immigrants that, again
according to the Pew Research Center, made that country the largest
source of newcomers to the U.S. for more than four decades.
Being
born in Germany wasn't a problem when Friedrich arrived in the United
States. He went on to become an American citizen and to amass a nest egg
— the first Trump
family fortune — by "mining the miners" in Seattle and the Yukon during
the gold-rush era. Rather than dig for ore himself, he opened
restaurants, often in the red-light district, and supplied booze and
easy access to women. Although such behavior does not
rise to the level of the criminal activity grandson Donald claims is
rampant among immigrants from Mexico, the local North West Mounted
Police superintendent found it unacceptable — and in 1901, when he
announced a clean-up, Friedrich pulled up stakes and
headed back to New York.
That's
when he hit his first major bump in the road, in the form of a dilemma
that often arises in immigrant communities: Friedrich had adjusted to
life in his new home,
but his wife Elizabeth, also from Kallstadt, had not. Although Germans
were the biggest ethnic group in the U.S. and New York City had the
third-largest number of German speakers in the world, behind only Berlin
and Vienna, Elizabeth was desperately homesick.
Friedrich did his best to make her feel at home in the U.S., but
ultimately, in 1904, he, Elizabeth, and their infant daughter headed
back to Germany — what Mitt Romney would have called "voluntary
self-deportation."
When
Friedrich applied to regain German citizenship, he hit a second big
bump: He had left his native country when too young to do military
service, which was compulsory
in Germany, and he was returning after he was over the age limit. He
insisted that the only reason he had immigrated was to provide for his
widowed mother, but the authorities dismissed him as a draft dodger.
Many observers would consider such an infraction
less serious than the rapes and drug-dealing Donald accuses Mexican
immigrants of committing, but German officials kicked Friedrich out —
ironically, the same fate Donald would like to mete out to undocumented
immigrants and their families today.
In
1905, Friedrich and his family sailed back to the U.S. Despite
Friedrich's best efforts, the Trump family would be Americans after all.
Friedrich
died in May 1918, just before the end of World War I. There was a
rising tide of anti-German sentiment in America, manifested in
accusations of disloyalty against
people with German backgrounds, diatribes against music by German
composers, even bonfires of books by German authors. People with German
names changed them, and readership plummeted for the nation's hundreds
of German-language publications.
This
xenophobic atmosphere had a profound impact on Friedrich's older son,
Fred (named after Friedrich but in an Americanized form). Only 12 years
old when his father
died, Fred was now the man of the house, and he began to tamper with
his family history — that is, to tell it like it wasn't. Despite growing
up in a German-speaking home and speaking his parents' language on
visits to Kallstadt, he said he didn't know German,
and by the beginning of World War II, he said his family was from
Sweden.
Elizabeth
Trump, Fred's German-born mother and Friedrich's widow, lived across
the street from Fred and his family. She was a regular presence in their
lives and didn't
die until 1966, when Fred's son Donald was 20; nonetheless Donald, too,
preferred to describe his ancestry as Swedish — to tell it like it's
not — and did so in his autobiography, Trump: The Art of The Deal,
published in 1987.
Eventually,
it became impossible to keep up the bogus Swedish origin story, and in a
1990 interview with Vanity Fair, Donald acknowledged his German
heritage with a carefully
parsed version of the truth ("My father was not German; my father's
parents were German"). But he then distanced himself from the facts —
i.e., told it like it wasn't — by adding that his grandparents had
really been "from all over Europe" (they weren't) and
saying that he mentioned Germany only so that all the people in Sweden
who seemed to be expecting him to visit would know why he hadn't done
so.
Whatever
Trump's failure to "tell it like it is" about his own immigrant family,
he has put in an even more dismal performance when it comes to telling
it like it truly
is about the history of immigration to this country, and about the way
in which every successive wave of immigrants has ultimately assimilated
into American society.
Thus,
for example, German-Americans — the same group to which Donald himself
belongs and that was so stigmatized during World War I and World War II —
have become so assimilated
that few Americans realize this remains America's largest national
ethnic group.
The
same assimilation process is happening today with other immigrant
groups, as documented in a recent report from the National Academies of
Sciences, Engineering, and
Medicine that looked at 41 million immigrants, including 11.3 million
who are undocumented. The report found that, contrary to suggestions by
Trump and other anti-immigrant groups, these newcomers are not
anti-social and unhealthy misfits leeching off our
health-care and educational systems. Rather, they are eager to learn
English; have lower rates of obesity and chronic disease and fewer
deaths from cancer and heart disease than native-born Americans; and
have much lower rates of crime and violence in the
cities and neighborhoods where they live than similar locations lacking
immigrants.
Zeroing
in more specifically on Mexican immigrants, a study published in 2015
by the American Immigration Council found that the incarceration rate
for less-educated young
native-born males is more than three times greater than comparable
Mexican immigrant young males.
Given
his own family history, one might expect Trump to endorse America's
history of embracing immigrants. Instead, he declared in his
announcement speech, that, next
to repealing ObamaCare, the top priority in his presidency would be "to
build a great, great wall on our southern border."
Arguably,
the wall Trump proposed would keep Mexicans out of the U.S. But, at
least in the aggregate, it might also spare Mexicans bad health,
criminality, and prison
— and it would certainly deprive this country of the vigor and
energetic striving associated with every new immigrant group.
Whether
this anti-immigrant agenda would ultimately put America back on track,
and the trade-offs that would be involved, are something every candidate
— indeed, every
American — needs to think about.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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