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Explaining El Salvador's Violence Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=43261"><span class="small">Hilary Goodfriend, Jacobin</span></a>   
Wednesday, 12 February 2020 14:01

Excerpt: "The grisly violence in El Salvador has social and political origins. It is neither inevitable nor insuperable."

Members of the Salvadoran Armed Forces are seen within the Legislative Assembly during a protest outside the Legislative Assembly to make pressure on deputies to approve a loan to invest in security, in San Salvador on Feb. 9, 2020. (photo: Getty)
Members of the Salvadoran Armed Forces are seen within the Legislative Assembly during a protest outside the Legislative Assembly to make pressure on deputies to approve a loan to invest in security, in San Salvador on Feb. 9, 2020. (photo: Getty)


Explaining El Salvador's Violence

By Hilary Goodfriend, Jacobin

12 February 20


The grisly violence in El Salvador has social and political origins. It is neither inevitable nor insuperable.

n recent years, the small Central American nation of El Salvador has become synonymous in the United States with gangs. One organization in particular, MS-13, has captured popular imagination, usually in racist media caricature. This is thanks in no small part to Donald Trump’s bigoted fearmongering. But well before Trump, the US government was at work fomenting the conditions for the gang’s rise and inflating its international profile.

Jimmy Carter ignored Archbishop Oscar Romero’s plaintive request to sever aid to the Salvadoran military dictatorship in 1980, shortly before Romero’s assassination by US-trained death squads. Ronald Reagan escalated and sustained the bloody civil war that ensued, in which US-backed security forces were responsible for over 85 percent of the seventy thousand deaths and ten thousand disappearances suffered during the twelve-year conflict with the leftist insurgency. It was the Clinton administration that escalated the incarceration and deportation of Salvadoran refugees, many of whom adapted to local gang culture in working-class California neighborhoods and prisons, and approved the draconian 1996 immigration reforms that created the foundations for today’s mass deportation machine.

Bush Jr signed the Central American Free Trade Agreement, which further subordinated the region’s labor and natural resources to the demands of US capital, ravaging local economies and spurring US-bound migration beyond even wartime levels. And in 2012, the Obama administration designated MS-13 an international criminal organization on par with the Italian Camorra, Mexico’s Zetas, or the Japanese Yakuza, all while accelerating the detention and deportation of migrants to unprecedented levels.

Decades of bipartisan US security aid fueled El Salvador’s repressive zero-tolerance policing, which radicalized and fortified incipient gang organizations. All this, to say nothing of the preceding century of imperial pillage, intervention, and exploitation, produced a predictably monstrous social formation.

With MS-13 in the spotlight, a flurry of new English-language publications seek to shed light on the gang for a US audience. Few are better positioned to do so than the investigative journalists from the Salvadoran digital magazine El Faro, who gained international acclaim for their reporting on gangs and government corruption. In a recent book, The Hollywood Kid: The Violent Life and Violent Death of an MS-13 Hitman, celebrated El Faro contributors and brothers Óscar and Juan José D’Aubuisson Martínez — nephews of Roberto D’Aubuisson, the notorious death squad leader and founder of the far-right ARENA party — chronicle the devastating story of a notorious MS-13 hitman turned police informant, providing at the same time a detailed history of the gang’s origins and rise within a broader international context.

The Hollywood Kid is a gripping read, thoroughly researched and dramatically conveyed. But the book also reproduces racialized and gendered constructs common to the mainstream discourse on violence and crime in El Salvador. Above all, despite recourse to historical antecedents, the book perpetuates the notion of Salvadoran violence as inevitable, innate, and insuperable.

The Life and Death of a Hitman

The book recounts the life and death of Miguel Ángel Tobar, alias el niño de Hollywood, who gained notoriety within MS-13 before becoming a protected state witness. It begins with his hurried and thoroughly undignified funeral, beset by hostile local gang members, then hopscotches through time with miserable anecdotes from Tobar’s biography, interspersed with historical overviews of the social conflicts that led to the genocidal massacre of 1932, the civil war of 1980–1992, and the UN-negotiated Peace Accords that demilitarized the state and established the fragile and fraught liberal institutions like the National Civil Police now charged with repressing the gangs

The Martínez brothers review the origins of El Salvador’s monocrop export economy, first driven by indigo under Spanish colonization, then coffee, and the sequences of primitive accumulation that drove indigenous inhabitants from their mountainous communal lands and into the hands of the emergent landowning oligarchy. They recount the failed 1932 communist and indigenous uprising in western El Salvador, positioning Tobar as heir to that legacy of repression and bloodshed.

Tobar was born in 1984 to a family of immiserated peons who labored on the large coffee plantations near the Guatemalan border. The authors describe his first attempt at murder when, at the age of eleven, he tried to kill the hacienda foreman who Tobar’s alcoholic father had authorized to regularly rape his sister. A few years later, in the mid-1990s, he would be recruited into a local MS clique led by a deported former national guardsman, alias “Chepe Furia,” who transcended the usual turf disputes to run a powerful organized crime syndicate that dominated western El Salvador.

The Martínez brothers identify Ronald Reagan as an unsuspecting “godfather” of MS-13. They describe early refugees displaced by the civil war as caught between the growing conflagration in El Salvador and the War on Drugs in California. For the nascent Salvadoran gangsters, “Reagan gave them everything they needed to grow. He ensured a constant flow of new members from Central America and at the same time weakened their biggest enemies in California.”

Through interviews with anonymous scattered survivors of those early days, the book provides an overview of the complex milieu in which recent migrants flooded into the veteran Barrio 18 gang while others formed their own groups. Initial MS formations were rooted in metal, marijuana, and satanism. But the original Mara Salvatrucha Stoners would eventually join the Sureño system of Southern California Chicano gangs, governed by the Mexican Mafia, abandoning their rocker identity for the predominant cholo style and tacking a requisite “13” onto their title.

At the intersection of the consolidating mass incarceration regime and the emergent machinery of mass deportation, working-class young Salvadoran refugees were increasingly shuttled into US prisons and deported. They were expelled to a society ravaged by recent armed conflict, the root causes of which remained largely unresolved, and dramatic neoliberal restructuring.

Extremism flourishes in these wretched conditions. Two of the principal social institutions that structure daily life for working-class slums and poor rural enclaves in postwar El Salvador are the gangs and fundamentalist Christian evangelical churches: “Both of them came from the United States, and after they arrived their destinies would be interlaced forever. [.?.?.] Since the early ’90s both groups saw themselves as reigning over the margins, as giving direction — though by very different means — to the lives of those neighborhoods and villages where the state represents nothing but a distant threat.”

In the swelling ranks of El Salvador’s impoverished unemployed postwar youth, deportees found eager participants for the cliques that would soon become nodes in an international network. The gangs, the Martínez brothers note, have a different ethos than that of, say, extravagant Mexican narcos: “The life of gang soldiers didn’t change much after they earned their letters. It was, and is, a mafia, but a mafia of the poor.” Despite its nationwide extortion system, “the MS-13 economy is barely a subsistence economy” for its tens of thousands of participants.

It was in prison, however, that these street organizations grew into mature criminal enterprises. The authors offer data that points to a remarkably under-examined process: the US export of mass incarceration throughout the region. They note that US-backed anti-gang policing in El Salvador saw the prison population nearly double between 2000–6. In fact, today El Salvador ranks second in the world to the United States for incarceration rates, jailing an astonishing 604 people per 100,000 inhabitants.

The authors claim that “one of the greatest failures of the Salvadoran government was handing the prisons over to the gangs.” They describe the brutal violence between rival groups that drove the government to segregate the burgeoning prison population in the early 2000s, allowing the gangs to consolidate leadership structures nationally.

State actors further contributed to the sophistication of gang leadership during the first administration of the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN), the party of the former leftist insurgency, when members of the security cabinet secretly helped negotiate a truce between the warring parties. The brokers helped facilitate communications to ensure agreements with imprisoned leaders could take effect on the outside, with predictable consequences once the truce collapsed.

Despite the notable reduction in homicides achieved, the strategy — revealed in 2012 by El Faro’s reporting — was met with broad public repudiation: “The government, faced with mass rejection of its peace policy, prioritized raising its popularity over lowering the homicide rate.” The ensuing surge in murders, which peaked in 2015 and 2016, was a reaction from the betrayed gangs. The state’s repressive response to the targeting of public security forces escalated the violence, with US-trained troops forming clandestine extermination groups, essentially reviving wartime paramilitary death squads.

The Hollywood Kid, for his part, managed to evade prison. After years as a loyal foot soldier and dozens of murders to his name, a bloody series of betrayals left Tobar isolated and endangered. In 2010, he flipped, agreeing to testify against Chepe Furia and his underlings.

Tobar spent four years as a protected witness, complementing his meager state rations by selling marijuana that he grew outside the shack on police grounds where he lived with his partner and daughter and, when that failed, shaking down passing cars for spare change. This was where the authors conducted most of their interviews with the Hollywood Kid, restless, undernourished, and stoned.

The Salvadoran state’s capacity to protect its informants is “pathetically inadequate,” and Tobar quickly became the target of gang assassination attempts and threats from crooked cops. Tobar’s testimony brought down an entire MS clique, but, under pressure, he denied his prior implication of two officers in a key homicide. Tobar abandoned his precarious police protection in 2014. He was killed not long after, shot by his former homies after venturing out of hiding to register the birth of his infant daughter at city hall.

No Way Out

The Hollywood Kid is an illuminating glimpse into the workings of a notoriously inaccessible mass criminal enterprise, as well as the failures of the strategies deployed to contain it. Still, its shortcomings are equally revealing.

The gender imbalance among the characters and informants featured in the book is too stark to be ignored. Not until Chapter Six, under a subheading titled “Women,” do the authors half-heartedly recognize this lapse, writing: “When you talk about gangs, you talk about men. This book is no exception. Our history of the Mara Salvatrucha 13 is mainly protagonized by men because more of them tell the stories and explain how the gangs function.” To us, they might have added. This tepid justification, evidently an afterthought, is immediately undermined by the authors themselves in a subsequent paragraph, who note that “there are more women than men in the wider gang structures of El Salvador.”

The women that do appear in the story are mostly downward gazing, furtive figures in the background. Wives making coffee, sisters being raped. Then there’s the vile depiction of Tobar’s mother “rotting” from a venereal disease, suffering from what the authors describe as “the pain in her innards, from which the kid spilled out thirty years ago.” Misogyny, so pervasive in the social relations that structure Salvadoran gangs, pervades these pages as well.

When it comes to Tobar, the authors often adopt the objectifying, external gaze of a nineteenth-century colonial anthropologist examining a lesser species. “There’s something animal about him. About his essence,” they write. This uncomfortable, dehumanizing language of an “animal, predatory essence” recurs throughout the text, naturalizing Tobar’s violent acts and tacitly associating them with his presumed indigenous ancestry. Indeed, in highlighting the pre-Hispanic rituals that imbue contemporary Catholic practice in rural El Salvador, the authors insinuate that ritual bloodshed, human sacrifice even, is some kind of latent impulse that links savage gang violence with a mystified cultural, even racial, heritage.

By essentializing Tobar, the authors essentialize Salvadoran violence. They suggest that El Salvador is trapped in “the cycle of violence, something that will never end because it has no way out.” That’s the final lesson of the book: from bloody pre-Hispanic sacrificial rituals, to the 1932 genocide, to the civil war, and now the gangs, El Salvador is preternaturally condemned to carnage.

In their effort to situate Tobar as the product of historical circumstances — “a long series of violent acts” — the authors resort to tired tropes. The Hollywood Kid renders Salvadoran gang violence into a grotesque, exotic spectacle for a foreign audience. And the analysis, in its excess, borders on nihilism. “The Kid’s story has one consistent thread: everything turns out badly.” El Salvador is portrayed as “a country that, after pitifully trying to hide its face, has shown what it truly is: nothing but war, repression, and hatred.” Far from insightful, the message is easy, and it’s nothing new.

Salvadoran scholar and artist Beatriz Cortez put it best. In a withering 2014 critique of Salvadoran novelist Horacio Castellanos Moya, she writes: “I came to accept that this work did not portray our country, but rather it repeated the official colonialist, racist, globalized, imperialist portrait of Central America.?.?.?. Both in his statements and the form in which time and again he has portrayed the Central American literary universe, he constructs it as other, as an atavistically violent world, an illiterate world, against art and literature, ignorant, obtuse, lacking intelligence.” Cortez’s appraisal of Castellanos Moya resonates here as well.

The hopeless racialized and gendered depiction of Salvadoran violence in The Hollywood Kid sells, especially to a US public. But the book, despite its deft command of history and wealth of information, does much to mystify the social conflict it purports to explain. For US readers committed to repairing the damages wrought by imperialism in the region, and Central Americans organizing for peace, justice, and self-determination, such representations are of little use, and may in fact work against our struggles.

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FOCUS: The Media Keep Falling in Love - With Anybody but Bernie Sanders Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=43579"><span class="small">Margaret Sullivan, The Washington Post</span></a>   
Wednesday, 12 February 2020 11:47

Sullivan writes: "Never has mainstream media turned its loving eyes to the front-runner, Bernie Sanders. Quite the opposite."

Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont gives a victory speech in Manchester, N.H., after winning the New Hampshire primary Tuesday night. (photo: Salwan Georges/WP)
Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont gives a victory speech in Manchester, N.H., after winning the New Hampshire primary Tuesday night. (photo: Salwan Georges/WP)


The Media Keep Falling in Love - With Anybody but Bernie Sanders

By Margaret Sullivan, The Washington Post

12 February 20

 

s the presidential campaign got underway last year, we watched the media lavish its affections on Beto O’Rourke for a while, and then Kamala Harris, briefly, and Elizabeth Warren for perhaps a month.

But, as it will, love waned.

Joe Biden became the new sure thing — experienced, solid and empathetic. Most of all, he possessed that ineffable quality: electability. But last week, after the Iowa caucuses, the attention shifted squarely to Pete Buttigieg, portrayed as a centrist savior, though it’s still debatable if he actually won.

Then Tuesday night, the news media’s roving crush moved to Minnesota senator Amy Klobuchar. Her third-place finish in the New Hampshire Democratic primary became the story of the night.

Never, though, has mainstream media turned its loving eyes to the front-runner, Bernie Sanders. Quite the opposite.

“He is a grumpy, angry person on the stump, and he is not going to be elected,” raved Republican strategist Sara Fagen on ABC News one recent Sunday morning.

At the New York Times, columnist Thomas Friedman scoffed at the Sanders surge to write in praise of former New York mayor Mike Bloomberg, who is on the verge of being the next flavor du jour, if his record on criminal justice doesn’t catch up with him.

On a sentence-by-sentence basis, straight news coverage may not have reflected an anti-Sanders bias, but the framing of that coverage — choices made on headlines and emphasis — sometimes did. (Sanders, in a home page headline in the Times, “tightens grip” on the party’s liberal wing, which sounds more threatening than victorious.)

Meanwhile, Klobuchar was queen for a day, garnering headlines like this one from Yahoo News: “Riding wave of momentum, Klobuchar lands in 3rd place in New Hampshire primary.” You heard words like “Klobucharge” and “Klomentum” bandied about.

On MSNBC Tuesday night, host Chris Matthews fawned: “Bernie indicts. She finds a way to care.”

Amy Goodman of the progressive news program Democracy Now, a Sanders defender, recalled hearing one cable pundit say Sanders had “flatlined at Number One.” On a recent episode she bemoaned that most of the media coverage is “so anti-Bernie it’s just remarkable.”

The subtext behind much of the disdain is a partly a deep-seated sentiment that Sanders, if nominated, has little chance of winning the general election. But it’s also partly — and more insidiously — that many journalists don’t identify easily with Sanders in the same way they do with, say, Warren or O’Rourke or Buttigieg.

In Iowa early this month, I asked one local reporter who had met all the major candidates who would be the strongest Democratic candidate. “I don’t have a hope, I have a fear,” came the answer. It wasn’t hard to figure out what that meant or how that sort of visceral dislike might make its way, subtly, into coverage.

While many reporters and pundits have seemed, until very recently, to casually discount Sanders, a few opinion writers are taking him very seriously — seriously enough to shoot off flares about what a bad choice they think he would make.

“Running Sanders Against Trump Would Be an Act of Insanity,” thundered the headline on a New York magazine piece by Jonathan Chait in late January.

He wrote: “No party nomination, with the possible exception of Barry Goldwater in 1964, has put forth a presidential nominee with the level of downside risk exposure as a Sanders-led ticket would bring. To nominate Sanders would be insane.”

“Bernie Can’t Win,” opined David Frum in the Atlantic, characterizing Sanders in unflattering terms as “a Marxist of the old school of dialectical materialism, from the land that time forgot.” At The Washington Post, columnist Jennifer Rubin has been equally tough; one recent headline: “Bernie Sanders’s Trump-like campaign is a disaster for Democrats.”

In turn, Sanders keeps dissing what he calls the corporate media, as he has for years.

In the official editorial-board interview with the New York Times recently, Sanders blustered that he doesn’t cozy up to powerful media figures as other candidates are wont to do.

“I’m not good at pleasantries. If you have your birthday, I’m not going to call you up to congratulate you, so you’ll love me and you’ll write nice things about me,” he said.

A few media figures are giving him his due, if a little grudgingly. CNN’s Jake Tapper was one: “Take a step back. He is 78 years old, he is a Democratic socialist, he is a Jewish American, originally from Brooklyn — it is a stunning achievement by Senator Sanders and for his movement.”

Sanders, though, doesn’t seem to mind. His ardent followers bond with him and with each other by despising the mainstream media, often enough with good reason.

It may well be that he doesn’t need or want the help of cable pundits, columnists and other opinion-makers.

From Beto to Biden, their crushes, so far, have turned into heartbreaks.

Maybe media love — fickle and fleeting — is a valentine Bernie Sanders would rather do without.

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The Pundits Wrote Off Bernie's Candidacy. In Iowa and New Hampshire, He Proved Them Wrong. Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=44184"><span class="small">Mehdi Hasan, The Intercept</span></a>   
Wednesday, 12 February 2020 09:42

Hasan writes: "Bernie Sanders is now the undisputed frontrunner in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination."

Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks at a campaign rally in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on Feb. 1, 2020. (photo: John Locher/AP)
Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks at a campaign rally in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on Feb. 1, 2020. (photo: John Locher/AP)


ALSO SEE: Bernie Sanders Just Won the All-Important New Hampshire Primary.
Here's How He Did It.

The Pundits Wrote Off Bernie's Candidacy. In Iowa and New Hampshire, He Proved Them Wrong.

By Mehdi Hasan, The Intercept

12 February 20

 

oodbye Joe Biden.

Bernie Sanders is now the undisputed frontrunner in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination. 

Last week, in the Iowa caucuses, Sanders won the popular vote by a clear margin in both the first and second rounds. 

On Monday, he took the lead in a national Quinnipiac University poll for the first time in the 2020 Democratic race. 

And yesterday, in New Hampshire, Sanders won with a narrow victory over former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg. Biden came in fifth.

What a difference a year makes. When he launched his second presidential campaign, in February 2019, the independent senator from Vermont was mocked and written off by much of the pundit class. The Washington Post’s Henry Olsen called him a “one-hit wonder,” adding: “After a few concerts that attract ever more “selective” audiences, he will likely drop out and retire, his influence consigned to history.” (On Monday night, a whopping 7,500 people turned out for a Sanders rally headlined by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, as well as rock band The Strokes, in Durham, New Hampshire.)

On Twitter, Olsen’s fellow Post columnist Jennifer Rubin described Sanders as “yesterday’s news” and suggested he would face “stiff competition for youth vote” from Beto O’Rourke. (O’Rourke quit the race in November while Sanders won almost half of 17-29 year olds in Iowa and more young voters in New Hampshire than “all of the other candidates combined.”)

Yet another Post columnist, David Von Drehle, wrote how Sanders would find “that his moment is gone, his agenda absorbed by more plausible candidates, his future behind him.”

Then there was MSNBC host Chris Matthews, who claimed Sen. Elizabeth Warren would “blow out Bernie pretty early on. Bernie will lose his votes to her.” (Warren, for the record, came third in Iowa and fourth in New Hampshire.)

MSNBC political contributor Jason Johnson went even further: “I see Bernie Sanders launching his campaign and by August, realizing he won’t be in the top five in Iowa, and dropping out.”

Do they never learn? For the second presidential cycle in a row, the political pundits have had to eat crow. During the 2016 race, former Obama strategist David Axelrod dismissed Sanders as the candidate with whom Democratic voters would only “flirt” or have a “fling” with. The Vermont senator went on to win 13 million votes and 23 states.

Four years later, Sanders has come from behind to dominate the first two contests of the 2020 Democratic race. In Iowa, he declared victory while calling for a partial recanvass of the chaotic and messy results. Remember: Over the past four decades, no candidate has won in both Iowa and New Hampshire and then failed to win the nomination.

Sanders beat Buttigieg by only a narrow margin in New Hampshire – especially compared to his 22-point victory over Hillary Clinton in the Granite State in 2016. Yet a win is a win, especially in the crowded 2020 field, and the only democratic socialist in this race now has what the New York Times has rightly called “that most prized and nebulous of assets: momentum.” Up next are the Nevada caucuses on February 22, where only a single percentage point separates Biden from Sanders. In South Carolina, which goes to the polls on February 29 and where Biden once led by a whopping 31 points, Sanders has narrowed the former vice-president’s lead to 8 points in the latest Zogby Analytics poll. 

Biden, though, is in freefall: an embarrassing fourth in Iowa, a humiliating fifth in New Hampshire. Back in December, I argued on CNN that mainstream media organizations were ignoring the possibility that Sanders could win three of the first four states. In fact, he could now end up winning all four of them. 

No wonder Democratic Party elites are panicking. We hear the same tired arguments about Sanders lacking “electability.” These arguments conveniently ignore the fact that Sanders beats Trump in head-to-head polling; that the Vermont senator is the most popular member of the Senate; and that this self-proclaimed socialist has both the highest “net favorability rating” among Democratic voters as well as the most enthusiastic base

Plus, the only way to test “electability” is through actual elections and, so far, Sanders is two for two. 

Iowa and New Hampshire, though, weren’t only victories for the senator from Vermont; they were also victories for Sanders’s signature issue, Medicare for All. Asked last week in an entrance poll how they felt about “replacing all private health insurance with a single government plan for everyone,” 57 percent of Iowa caucus-goers said they backed it, while only 38 percent were opposed. 

In New Hampshire, on Tuesday, again almost six in 10 voters said they supported a Medicare for All system over the current private insurance system, according to an early exit poll

Yet again, the pundits and prognosticators were wrong. “Iowa Democrats worry ‘Medicare for All’ hurts key industry,” read the headline in the Associated Press in December. “In Iowa, Single Payer ‘Medicare For All’ Loses Ground,” declared Forbes in August. “Medicare For All Isn’t That Popular – Even Among Democrats,” proclaimed FiveThirtyEight’s Nate Silver a month earlier.

“We’ve heard a lot about how BernieSanders is so ‘wildly out-of-touch’ with the Democratic electorate,” observed CNN contributor Kirsten Powers on Tuesday night. “Well, that’s not actually true.”

The message from Iowa and New Hampshire is clear. It was a big, big mistake to write off both Bernie Sanders and his No. 1 policy proposal. So, going forward, will his critics make that same mistake again?

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The Deep Roots of Trump's Anti-Immigrant Policies Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=43501"><span class="small">Daniel Denvir, Jacobin</span></a>   
Wednesday, 12 February 2020 09:42

Denvir writes: "Donald Trump's recent expansion of the Muslim ban and bid to exclude poor immigrants is further proof that his administration is one of the most anti-immigrant in US history. But it was Trump's predecessors who made his assault on immigrants possible."

A migrant family. (photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
A migrant family. (photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)


The Deep Roots of Trump's Anti-Immigrant Policies

By Daniel Denvir, Jacobin

12 February 20


Donald Trump’s recent expansion of the Muslim ban and bid to exclude poor immigrants is further proof that his administration is one of the most anti-immigrant in US history. But it was Trump’s predecessors, Democrats and Republicans, who made his assault on immigrants possible.

he last week of January began with the Supreme Court’s conservative majority allowing the Trump administration’s bid to exclude poor immigrants from entering the United States, denying green cards to anyone deemed “likely” to use a wide array of public benefits, to go into effect. It ended with Trump extending his travel restrictions, which began as a Muslim ban in 2017, to six more countries: Myanmar, Eritrea, Kyrgyzstan, Sudan, Tanzania, and, most consequentially, Nigeria, whose people Trump once worried would never “go back to their huts” if they came to the United States. Nearly a quarter of Africa’s population is now estimated to face restrictions on US immigration visas.

You perhaps missed all of that thanks to the lead-up to the Iowa caucus, impeachment, and the coronavirus outbreak. But after years of attacks on asylum seekers and undocumented people, and political fights to “build the wall,” this represents among Trump’s most consequential and brutal attacks on legal immigration.

As with the entirety of Trump’s war on immigrants, this expansive interpretation of the “public charge” rule is both a cruel innovation and also very old, rooted in a long history of racist anti-immigrant policies that, in this particular case, dates to 1882. The travel ban, by contrast, is new in its method but, like the public charge rule, old in its intention: using immigration law to shape racial demographics, attempting to preserve, as modern nativist movement godfather John Tanton once put it, “a European-American majority, and a clear one at that.”

Immigration politics and policy is where domestic class conflict and racism intersect with a highly unequal world order riven by permanent war and climate crisis. Trump has made it clear that he wants fewer immigrants from what he once referred to as “shithole” countries in the Global South and more from European countries like Norway. The new public charge rule is a tool to do just that, brazenly targeting poor immigrants as a means to exclude nonwhite ones.

Trump called for the Muslim ban on the campaign trail on the basis of the Islamophobic argument that Muslims are terrorists, justified its implementation before the Supreme Court by referencing supposedly color-blind national security concerns, and has now expanded it for purposes that are simultaneously anti-Muslim and racist, particularly against black people.

Racism is a constant in American history. But the political work that racism does changes over time: it is “a composite formation, bearing vestiges of bygone dynamics as well as traces of emerging developments,” as Daniel Martinez HoSang and Joseph E. Lowndes write in their new book, Producers, Parasites, Patriots: Race and the New Right-Wing Politics of Precarity. Trump’s policies are clearly motivated by racism. But invoking racism alone isn’t enough to explain how racism operates and what political work it accomplishes over time. To defeat Trump’s racist policies, we must also understand and attack the broader economic and political system they serve.

Liberals have rightly denounced Trump and his policies for their racism and inhumanity. But liberals often fail to effectively fight racism and xenophobia because they have too often failed to recognize their connection to neoliberal economics and imperial violence that too many liberal politicians in fact support. Defeating Trump’s racism requires an attack on the entire system that made it possible, and Donald Trump did not invent that system.

Deep Roots

In the late nineteenth century, “the alleged racial inferiority of immigrants became the explanation for depressed wages, labor strife, and the emerging ‘sweatshop system,’” just as their un-Americanness explained left-wing radicalism, writes sociologist Kitty Calavita. Amid 1990s balanced-budget conservativism and the rise of Democratic neoliberalism, nativism was often articulated in the language of anti-welfare fiscal conservatism. “[T]his scapegoating of immigrants as the cause of the crisis found a ready audience among the white middle class who disproportionately make up the electorate,” she argues.

More recently, a resurgent nativism has targeted immigrants as a threat to national security, as a way for the Right to make sense of the war on terror’s failure. And as nativist politics has reached a fever pitch, decades of demonizing immigrants as a criminal threat have morphed into the notion that they pose a racially existential threat — the white supremacist conspiracy theory  that Mexicans are engaged in a “Reconquista” and that immigrants are demographically supplanting whites through a “Great Replacement” or “white genocide.”

Assessing the history of anti-immigrant politics requires not only accounting for why nativism waxes and wanes in intensity at particular moments — the quantity of nativism — but also its quality. As Calavita writes: “If immigrants serve as scapegoats for social crises, it stands to reason that the specific content of anti-immigrant nativism will shift to encompass the prevailing malaise.”

And so it has. Trump’s public charge rule combines the balanced-budget, anti-welfare nativism that first broke out in the 1990s with a legal tool developed a century earlier. The Immigration Act of 1882, the first comprehensive federal immigration law, barred entry to “any convict, lunatic, idiot, or any person unable to take care of himself or herself without becoming a public charge.” That rule, in turn, was modeled on New York and Massachusetts state immigration laws that, as historian Hidetaka Hirota details, targeted Irish paupers treated as a threat to the self-sufficient white settler ideal.

Also passed in 1882 was the Chinese Exclusion Act which, as its title suggests, barred entry to Chinese workers. The Immigration Act of 1891 subsequently provided the federal government with its first general deportation powers and gave immigration inspectors the unchallengeable power to exclude those they deemed “likely to become a public charge.”

The reason many white Americans wanted Chinese and other poor immigrants excluded was the same reason that the so-called colonization of black people to other countries was the only way that many whites in antebellum America could imagine enslaved people becoming free. The country’s economic system required people to do grueling forms of labor; it then used racism to degrade those laborers and portray them as incapable of free citizenship because of their perceived dependence.

As Hirota writes: “Deportation was .?.?. a policy intended to ensure that the United States was a nation of self-sufficient workers by eliminating foreigners who deviated from this vision.” At the core of this ideology was a deepening contradiction: Citizens were supposed to be politically and thus economically independent, but the rise of industrial capitalism, pushing the masses into wage labor, was quickly revealing this to be a fiction.

The same logic has held firm in contemporary anti-immigrant politics, which exploded onto the national scene in 1994 with California’s Proposition 187. The end of the Cold War meant big cuts to defense industry jobs, and the state’s economy slipped into recession. NAFTA had created widespread anxiety about jobs heading south across the border, and the Clinton administration benefited from redirecting public fears toward the people and drugs coming north.

At the same time, California had become home to the nation’s largest population of undocumented immigrants. Large-scale Mexican labor migration was institutionalized by the Bracero guest worker program, which issued an estimated 4.6 million temporary visas between 1942 and 1964. Yet in the 1960s and ’70s, opportunities for legal Mexican migration were radically restricted, resulting in the criminalization of ongoing Mexican migration and the rise of the specter of the Mexican “illegal immigrant.”

By the 1990s, Mexicans were portrayed as such hard workers that they would undercut native-born wages — but also, contradictorily, as lazy layabouts designing to live off hardworking taxpayers. In both cases, however, they were cast as dependents and thus easy to blame for economic insecurity.

In 1994, California voters passed Proposition 187, which denied social services, including public education, to suspected undocumented immigrants (though much was quickly blocked in court). Anti-welfare politics took aim not only at pathologized black mothers but Mexican mothers as well, a ready scapegoat at a time of economic insecurity. This was tied to the era’s anti-crime politics, which demonized poor black and Mexican men as the dangerous product of the welfare state’s broken families.

Proposition 187 asserted that the people of California “are suffering economic hardship caused by the presence of illegal aliens in this state” and from “personal injury and damage caused by [their] criminal conduct.” The measure simultaneously conjured up a law-abiding and taxpaying victimized citizenry, the suffering people, and those who were to blame, criminal and moocher aliens.

It was halfway through the New Deal order’s half-century-long meltdown. Violent crime rose alongside income inequality. Poor and working-class immigrants, particularly Mexicans, were fashioned into scapegoats. They, along with Central Americans, remain so today.

A Useful Enemy

Just as Mexican labor migration became criminalized in the 1970s, business launched a successful assault on the New Deal order, creating a new economy that was increasingly unequal. The response from both neoliberal Democrats like Bill Clinton (who opposed Prop 187 but in 1996 signed a “welfare reform” law attacking poor people in general and immigrants in particular) and Republicans like California governor Pete Wilson (who hitched his successful reelection campaign to the measure) was to blame poor others for the problems of supposed hardworking Americans who played by the rules.

“Illegal immigrants” were portrayed as violating that rule multiple times over: by crossing the border without authorization, by giving birth to children with citizenship rights, and by claiming jobs and services to which they had no right. “We can’t afford to lose control of our own borders at a time when we are not adequately providing for the jobs, health care, and the education of our own people,” said Clinton, who dramatically enlarged the deportation machine and launched a process of border militarization that would over the next two decades nearly quintuple the size of the Border Patrol and build hundreds of miles of fencing.

The system had created a sense of scarcity. Nativist politics right and center found immigrants and the “insecure” border that they crossed to be a useful enemy.

The permanent war that followed September 11, 2001 conjured new enemies at home and abroad. Trump’s Fortress America emerged from George W. Bush’s war-on-terror declaration that this country was a “homeland”: the politics of the war on terror fell back to the border after people grew disillusioned with the overseas conflict on the front lines. Bush declared: “We’re taking the fight to the terrorists abroad, so we don’t have to face them here at home.”

The loss of the war abroad intensified the war at the border. Immigrants were painted as posing a terrorism threat after years of being framed as posing an economic, criminal, and racial one.

The demonization of immigrants worsened and became more explicitly Islamophobic as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan lost public support. The war on terror had been waged on the neoconservative promise to liberate Arab and Muslim people. Remarkably, Republican favorability toward Muslims rose dramatically after the September 11 attacks. As the public turned against the wars, however, many turned against Muslims, too, and anti-immigrant politics was increasingly articulated in anti-Muslim terms. The historical record clearly shows that contemporary Islamophobia is not a result of September 11, but of the failure of the war on terror that was launched in response.

Military action’s failure to order the world abroad only heightened demands on the Right to secure Fortress America at home. The border was the last line of defense. Bush’s wars became interminable conflicts framed in civilizational terms, using religious difference to racialize Muslims.

Today, the Trumpist right fights for the American people against an expansive and expanding civilizational other that encompasses Mexicans, Chinese, Muslims, Nigerians, and more. His immigration policies join that narrowly circumscribed vision of the American people to a global European-descendent people: “The fundamental question of our time,” Trump said in his 2017 speech in Warsaw, “is whether the West has the will to survive.”

American citizenship has long been premised on the notion that free Americans can accomplish anything here and abroad. But economic precarity and geopolitical decline make that promise feel empty, and scapegoats are required if the established order is to carry on. Trump isn’t so much an anti-establishment politician as a product of that establishment’s morbid symptoms, a desperate bid to preserve a system whose legitimacy is in crisis.

Trump’s nativism thus represents continuity more than change: like politicians in both the late nineteenth century and the 1990s, he uses racism to protect an immiserating economic order; he attacks the poor to shore up a racial hierarchy threatened by demographic change and an American national identity buffeted by imperial crisis — whether the closing of the frontier, the transoceanic empire built by the Spanish-American War, the end of the Cold War, or the failure of the war on terror.

Attacking “Illegal Immigration”

Immigration has long been used as a tool for demographic engineering. The country was not conceived of as a nation of immigrants but a nation of settlers. Migration is not self-evidently a problem; for much of American history, European migration and the forced migration of enslaved Africans were in fact the solution.

The Naturalization Act of 1790 opened citizenship to most “any alien” who was a “free white person.” In a society that was murderously expanding westward, dispossessing indigenous people, and seeking to grow its base of productive settler citizens, European immigrants were often desirable. The exclusion that began with Chinese workers in 1882 and gradually shut off migration from nearly the entirety of Asia in the 1920s extended to the national origins quotas’ sharp restrictions on Southern and Eastern Europeans, whose poverty and cultural difference helped render them racial others.

For the duration of the quotas’ four-decade life span, the policies worked to consolidate white supremacy as it was then understood: immigrants from Great Britain, Germany, and Ireland made up nearly three-quarters of the total. Until the quotas were abolished in 1965, this country’s immigration policy was explicitly racist.

Stephen Miller, Trump’s zealous anti-immigration czar, has praised the quota system. But while Trump has embraced legislation to slash legal immigration, there is little possibility that such a bill could ever become law. Trump’s executive actions are harming countless immigrants, but they are actually a sign of the nativists’ weakness: the travel ban, cuts to refugee admissions, the public charge rule, and other acts stand no chance of fundamentally reengineering American demographics because they don’t legislatively restrict legal immigration, and they will be reversed the moment any Democratic president takes office. They fear a so-called majority-minority country, but they cannot stop it.

The problem is an ironic one. Since the 1990s, the war on immigrants has attacked “illegal immigrants,” often in the name of protecting legal immigration. “Our nation was built by immigrants,” said Clinton in 1995. “But we won’t tolerate immigration by people whose first act is to break the law as they enter our country.”

For nativists, attacking “illegal immigration” was supposed to be a means to build public and political support for attacking immigration of any kind. But the means have taken on a life of their own, because the demonization of undocumented immigrants has so focused the immigration debate on “illegal immigration” that it has all but taken the question of legal immigration off the table.

Anti-immigrant voters and politicians alike, Trump included, have insisted that they are in favor of immigrants as long as they “come the right way.” As much as hard-core nativists want to remake American demography, nativism is constantly called upon to do too much other political work: demonizing welfare recipients, legitimating NAFTA, explaining the war on terror, getting Trump elected, and much more.

Trump is running one of the most anti-immigrant administrations in American history. But it was Trump’s predecessors who made his assault on immigrants possible, both legally and politically.

Contemporary right-wing xenophobia traces its long, gnarled roots to settler-colonial dispossession, slavery, anti-Asian immigration laws, and myriad foreign wars. His rhetoric and its resonance owe to a bipartisan tradition of painting immigrants as an economic, fiscal, criminal, and security threat. The tools that he uses to persecute and deport exist thanks to laws passed and policies enacted as long ago as the nineteenth century and as recently as the Obama administration, which used the criminal justice system’s enormous power to identify, detain, prosecute, and deport enormous numbers of immigrants.

The public charge rule and travel bans are cases in point. Latin American immigrants have been portrayed as racial others precisely because of the arduous work they often do — an uncomfortable reminder that American prosperity has always depended upon the most wicked forms of exploitation, in turn justified by racist ideology. The travel ban is the war on terror coming home to roost, explaining the failure of American power by scapegoating Muslims and the Global South.

The interminable debate over whether economic anxiety or racism catapulted Trump into office was always posing the wrong question. In fact, racism and class domination are fundamentally intertwined — and they both, in turn, are deeply connected to America’s place in the world. Nativism is a way to make sense of an economic reality that rewards a few and punishes the many, and of a geopolitical order that promises American dominance but delivers only violence, insecurity, and uncertainty. We can’t end the war on immigrants without transforming the economic system and foreign policies for which it has long provided an alibi.

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Our View of Black History Has Radically Shifted in a Few Short Years Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=53292"><span class="small">Salim Muwakkil, In These Times</span></a>   
Wednesday, 12 February 2020 09:42

Muwakkil writes: "New developments surrounding the conversation about race in America inject a shot of badly needed relevance into the often restrained observance of Black History Month."

Slave shackles on display at the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C., in 2016. (photo: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)
Slave shackles on display at the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C., in 2016. (photo: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)


Our View of Black History Has Radically Shifted in a Few Short Years

By Salim Muwakkil, In These Times

12 February 20


The case for reparations and The 1619 Project have focused attention on what makes African Americans distinct.

lack History Month, if treated seriously, could help clarify a key point about race in America: African Americans were created by slavery. As I argued in 2006: 

Millions of Africans wound up in America only because they were kidnapped to fill the needs of a slave economy. This process forged a new people, who became American by necessity, and included 12 generations of chattel slavery. 

This history of slave—rather than racial—identification accounts for the disadvantages accrued by the progeny of enslaved Africans. With this understanding, the culpability for redressing that specific legacy rests on the government that abetted it.

My 2006 piece noted that affirmative action was, at first, created to compensate the victims of slavery’s legacy—but “other groups had to be included to gain political support … [and] affirmative action became a comprehensive attempt to offset discrimination against all ‘minorities.’ ” The resulting practice meant that a business exercising affirmative action could employ many people of color without hiring a single African American. That affirmative action has diverged so dramatically from its initial conception is yet more proof of this nation’s reluctance to face the truth of its ignoble, Afrophobic history.

The issues I raised in 2006 rose to the surface of public discourse in 2019 in two major ways. The New York Times Magazine embarked on something it called “The 1619 Project,” named to mark the 400th anniversary of the arrival of the first enslaved Africans to the shores of Virginia in what would become the United States. Spearheaded by Times reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones, the project’s goal was “to reframe American history by considering what it would mean to regard 1619 as our nation’s birth year. Doing so requires us to place the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of the story we tell ourselves about who we are as a country.” Such an audacious conception—in the Times? As I read through the special issue, I found a new awareness of how the legacy of slavery is thoroughly interwoven with America’s founding precepts. The recognition seemed too good to be true.

Despite predictable grumbling from conservative quarters and some academic salons, the response to the project has been overwhelmingly positive. The Times supplement quickly sold out. What’s more, school districts in Chicago, Washington, D.C., and Buffalo, N.Y., (among a growing number) have incorporated material from the project into their curricula.

Reparations, too, has burst into public view. In summer 2019, the House held its first hearing on H.R. 40, a bill that would create a commission to develop proposals to address and redress the legacy of slavery. The bill had been introduced by the late Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.) in each House session since 1989—where it languished, unattended—but this hearing attracted, among others, actor/activist Danny Glover and author Ta-Nehisi Coates, whose 2014 essay in The Atlantic, “The Case for Reparations,” gave the concept an infusion of intellectual credibility. Early in the 2020 Democratic campaign, several candidates, urged on by candidate Marianne Williamson (who since has dropped out), expressed support.

While the discussion of reparations has died down again, its emergence in public discourse is another sign that the legacies of slavery—housing discrimination, wealth inequality, educational disadvantage—are being treated with new urgency. This refined perspective on our nation’s history directly connects slavery to the ongoing socioeconomic status of slavery’s victims. Finding data to trace the multigenerational path of these wrongs has become a new mission for historical researchers.

Thankfully, these new developments surrounding the conversation about race in America inject a shot of badly needed relevance into the often restrained observance of Black History Month.

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