Immigration and Nationalism

The fiscal year is the period October 1-September 30. These numbers come from various sources, including the United States Border Patrol, Custom and Border Protection, and the Department of Homeland Security. I conclude this blog with commentary. 

Immigrant families irregularly crossing the United States’ southern border exceeded 100,000 in 2018. This is a record number for this category. The vast majority were Central Americas, and 98% of them (including tens of thousands of unaccompanied children) remain in the United States.

A summer surge followed abandonment of zero tolerance by the Trump administration. In September, more than 16,000 immigrant parents and children were captured by border patrol. This is the worst month on record and almost twice the figures reported before zero tolerance. In the wake of denying asylum claims to those who said they were fleeing gang violence (which is not an internationally recognized reason for granting asylum), there has been a shift in pleas to claims of torture.

For the year, the figures indicate a 38 percent increase over 2017, breaking the record set under the Obama administration in 2016. Overall, Border Patrol captured 396,579 persons, and US Customs and Border Protection officers encountered another 124,511 trying to enter the country through official ports of entry. The overall figures represents a 25 percent increase over 2017 (a bit less than 553,378 in 2016).

Of the 521,090 in 2017, almost one-third were families and another eleven percent were children traveling unaccompanied. The overrepresentation of Central Americans in the figures represents a shift in the trend from last decade when illegal immigrants were predominantly adult males from Mexico. Those numbers were much higher than the present numbers.

The reporting of these numbers comes as a migrant caravan from Honduras, as large as 7,000 persons, makes it way to the United States. This has become an issue in the 2018 mid-term elections, with the Trump Administration painting the caravan as the work of leftist organizations funded in part by the left-wing populist government of Venezuela. 

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A few points with respect to these numbers and the debate over immigration.

I am strongly in favor of following the international convention on refugees and asylum seekers. The Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, or the 1951 Refugee Convention (with amendments) defines who is a refugee, delineates the rights of persons granted asylum, as well as the responsibilities of nations that grant asylum.

The Convention is rooted in Article 14 of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The 1967 protocol defines a refugee thus:

A person who, owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country; or who, not having a nationality and being outside the country of his former habitual residence as a result of such events, is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to return to it.

The United Nations calls on all countries to respect the right of persons to seek asylum in their jurisdictions. The nations of the world are not obliged to accept immigrants for any reason.

The United States is the most generous nation with respect to immigration, taking in more immigrants than any other nation. The other countries that have been generous are those of European Union, which came to an agreement in June 2018 to ease the pressures and dangers (for example, more than a thousand persons drowned in the Mediterranean Sea during the first half of 2018) caused by migration. Although tens of thousands (from Africa and the Middle East) migrated to Europe during 2018, the numbers are sharply lower than they were in 2015, when a record number of asylum-seekers—about 1.6 million—entered member countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

There are approximately 47 million foreign-born people living in the United States: 21 million naturalized US citizens and 26 million noncitizens. Of the latter, approximately 13 million are permanent residents, 11 million are here illegally (although that number is likely higher), and two million hold temporary visas. The number of foreign-born persons in the US has more than quadrupled since 1965. In 1965, foreign-born persons represented 5 percent of the US population. By 2015, they comprised 13.5 percent of the population (this is not much below peak immigration in 1890, when the foreign-born population was around 15 percent of the total population). 

In a June 2017 poll, Gallup found that as many as 37 million people in Latin America desire to relocate to the US permanently. One-third of all Hondurans express a desire to come live in the United States. In total, 150 million people—or 4% of the world’s adult population—would move to the U.S. if they could. If everyone who wanted to move to the U.S. did, the country’s total population would increase by almost 50%.

Of course, not all those who desire to come here have the means to even if the United States opened its borders. Nonetheless, one concern is that if the caravan is allowed entry to the United States, it will signal to Hondurans and other Central Americans the possibility of migrating to the United States. Hundreds of thousands of immigrants will stress neighboring countries. The journey is fraught with hazards: human trafficking, the elements, hunger and thirst. 

Once in the United States, immigration powerfully affects the life-chances of native and naturalized workers. Immigration redistributes wealth from those who compete with immigrants to those who use immigrants—from the employee to the employer. For the working class as a whole, the presence of immigrant labor results in the transfer of half a trillion dollars from the working class to the capitalist class every year, disproportionately impacting those workers with lower skill levels. The winners of this massive transfer are capitalist firms, who pay significantly less in labor costs, and immigrants, who could not command the same level of pay or enjoy the same living conditions in their home countries. Moreover, immigrants utilize government assistance at higher rates than native-born workers, yet pay less in taxes, in part because they have lower earnings, and, in the case of illegal immigration, pay little to no property, payroll, and income taxes. This means that every year a multi-billion-dollar burden is placed upon the shoulders of the native-born population in addition to the loss of income via the wage differential.

While there are rational concerns about immigration policy, without qualification, Trump’s characterization of immigrants from Mexico and Central America as “rapists” steers uncomfortably close to the past notion that black and brown men represent a sexual threat to white women. Polls show that that around six percent of the US population now identifies with far right ideology. That translates to more than 19 million people who express far right ideas. This is a trend we see in the West and it is dangerous. 

Trump’s claim that there are “Middle Easterners” among the caravan, while unsubstantiated and highly unlikely, is an attempt to link Arabs to terrorism and crime. Moreover, it links Arabs to Latinos who, to white non-hispanic Americans who have infrequent encounters with either ethnic group, become more prone to harass Latinos and report them to the police. This is not to say that it is okay for white non-hispanic Americans to do this with respect to Arabs, but to point out that the association of Arabs with terrorism has been associated with the harassment of Latinos. Trump should avoid saying these things. 

While those who are here illegally are, granting due process, subject to deportation, raising irrational fear of immigrants causes citizens and law enforcement to target brown people without reasonable suspicion that they are in fact lawbreakers. Persons speaking foreign languages, speaking with accents, listening to certain types of music, or dressing in certain ways are not indications of immigration status. Target individuals for for these reasons is ethnic and racial profiling, a practice that should be outlawed, even when it masquerades as race-neutral policy.

Again, there are good arguments for reforming U.S. immigration policy. But motives that lie beyond these arguments must be called out and actively resisted by those who are dedicated to the ideals of a free and open society that respect individual rights and due process. Indeed, building a consensus around immigration policy that reflects western values of civic nationalism is greatly hampered by the politics of white nationalism. Latino culture—food, music, art, dress—has greatly enhanced U.S. culture. Spanish is the second language of the United States and Latinos are the largest ethnic group in the country. For those concerned about cultural compatibility, Latin culture is Western culture, and one finds support in it for secular law and politics. Latin culture has intermingled with the culture of the United States for centuries, even before the United States existed as a country. Don’t fall for the fear tactics of the white nationalism. Trump should openly reject these politics.  

Secularism, Nationalism, and Nativism

As should be clear from my essays on this blog, I am a man of the left. I am also a scientist. If I confess to Darwinism when pressed on my orientation to matters of natural history (and what scientifically-minded person wouldn’t?), then I must confess to Marxism on matters of social history. This is not to say Marx is all there is. Marx didn’t answer every question (nor did Darwin). But Marx set the course through his domain.

I say this in part as an advertisement for the materialist conception of history, a sure (if not complete) foundation for the study of social history. Marx is to social science what Darwin and Galileo are to natural science and physical science respectively. Moreover, this essay will argue with Marxian logic.

But I also say this because, today, whenever a position is taken on nationalism and immigration that deviates from the rhetoric of the progressive activist—who, despite being a small percentage of the population, and even of the left, effectively wields the stigmatizing fire of white guilt—it’s scorched as racism. I fear the progressive activist no longer bears the torch of socialism, but has taken up the neoliberal cause. So I am here to present a Marxian defense of nationalism. 

Finally, I am not here merely attempting to shield myself from the smear of nativism by showing my left-wing credentials. This essay frames the problem of the current immigration debate on the left by using a Marxian lens focused on the meanings of nationalism and the historic development of secularism and the nation-state. I defend the integrity of the republic not from a nativist but a socialist standpoint. These matters need to be clarified.

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In Marx’s materialist conception of history, freedom and solidarity are objectively integral, alienated under conditions of segmentation, whether in class, gender, or religious estrangement. Justice and rights demand that adequate sociocultural arrangements empower individuals to participate fully in the production and shaping of the economic and political relations of which they are an integral part. Anywhere an individual is limited in his species-being, for example by religious doctrine and practice, unfreedom and injustice prevail.

Historical materialism thus represents a vigorous defense of the necessity and universality of human dignity and human rights, necessarily social rights in their fullest form, for the ground of self-actualization. A free society is “an association in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all,” Marx and Engels write in the Communist Manifesto in 1848. The conditions of freedom must be established for all before all people can be free. This formulation presupposes a conception of freedom.

In “Zur Judenfrage,” published in 1844 (in the Deutsch–Französische Jahrbücher), Marx argues that the freedom of conscience (the right to practice any religion one chooses) is, like private property, an expression of the bourgeois conception of liberty, based not on the association of man with man, but on the separation of man from man. Religious association is reduced to personal choice, its coercive nature concealed, enabling its perpetuation under the guise of a rhetoric of freedom.

Liberty of this sort is the possession of “egoistic man, an individual who enjoys his rights “without regard to other men.” Drawing a distinction between the droits de l’homie (the rights of man) and the droits du citizen (the rights of the citizen), Marx finds that “it is not man as citoyen, but man as bourgeois who is considered to be the essential and true man.” Estranged from his species-being (the self as social being, not atomized existence), egoistic man becomes “natural man,” and the rights of man appear as “natural rights,” to be protected by the state from society, as well as from the state itself.

The bourgeois conception of freedom is a negative one in which the person moves from the unfreedom of group identity, where he is defined in ethnic and religious terms, to the unfreedom of isolation, where he is an individual but also alone. As Erich Fromm writes in Escape from Freedom (1941): “freedom from the traditional bonds of medieval society, though giving the individual a new feeling of independence, at the same time made him feel alone and isolated, filled him with doubt and anxiety, and drove him into new submission and into a compulsive and irrational activity.”

Civil society, the domain of natural man, is emancipated from politics. Thus, in the transition from feudalism to capitalism, Marx writes in “Zur Judenfrage,” “man was not freed from religion; he received religious freedom. He was not freed from property; he received freedom to own property. He was not freed from the egoism of business; he received freedom to engage in business.” The heart of Marx’s argument is this: “The political revolution resolves civil life into its component parts without revolutionizing these components themselves or subjecting them to criticism.” 

The solution? The liberal’s negative conception of “freedom from” must be joined by the socialist or positive conception of “freedom to.”

Only when the real, individual man re-absorbs in himself the abstract citizen, and as an individual human being has become a species-being in his everyday life, in his particular work, and in his particular situation, only when man has recognized and organized his “own powers” as social powers, and, consequently, no longer separates social power from himself in the shape of political power, only then will human emancipation have been accomplished.

The notion of abstract citizen points to the historical necessity of the nation-state as the ground for organizing political action, for consciousness cannot be raised among large groups of people—required for the overthrow of the capitalist state—when they are segmented by ethnicity, language, race, and religion, identities that the nation-state subordinates to shared liberties and rights, however incomplete they may be. To be sure, the modern nation-state falls short of completing the historic mission of the proletariat, but the proletariat cannot move from klasse an sich (“class in itself”) to klasse für sich (“class for itself”) without common ground upon which to move on the objective facts of structural contradictions and class antagonisms with the subjective practice of class struggle.

Supposing the end of the nation-state before the world communist revolution is as idealistic and fantastic as supposing Martin Luther King Junior’s dream—articulated during the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom that his “children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character”—could be realized before racial justice has been achieved (which itself depends on the overthrow of the economic relations that gave rise to and perpetuate racial injustice). Indeed, colorblindness under conditions of racial injustice is another manifestation of white racism—just as the practice of globalism, or transnationalism under capitalism, is another manifestation of bourgeois classism.

This situation is the result of history. The emancipation of the individual from the lord-serf relationship in the transition from feudalism to capitalism, requiring secularism (the emancipation of religion from the state) and liberalism (the emancipation of property from the state), embodied in the nation state, assuming the individual in a single culture in a definite territory—one language, one law—appropriate to a market economy—all this created the grounds for democratic government through the progressive attainment of civil, political, and social rights: speech, suffrage, and education, values (excepting the property right) appropriate to socialism.

Marx and Engels write in The Communist Manifesto

The bourgeoisie keeps more and more doing away with the scattered state of the population, of the means of production, and of property. It has agglomerated population, centralized the means of production, and has concentrated property in a few hands. The necessary consequence of this was political centralization. Independent, or but loosely connected provinces, with separate interests, laws, governments, and systems of taxation, became lumped together into one nation, with one government, one code of laws, one national class-interest, one frontier, and one customs-tariff.

In this way capitalism lays the basis for its own negation; but socialist transformation is not automatic. As Rosa Luxembourg observes in the “Junius Pamphlet” of 1915 (“The Crisis in German Social Democracy”): “Bourgeois society stands at the crossroads, either transition to Socialism or regression into Barbarism.”

Marxists grasp that the bourgeois character of the modern nation state, a political-juridical and apparatus congruous to the capitalist mode of production in the context of European culture and historical development, alongside the creation of the modern national proletariat, sharpens class antagonisms and amplifies the chance for political struggle at a higher level. Just as freeing the economy from absolutism creates the ground for democracy (but doesn’t guarantee it), freeing conscience from theocracy creates the conditions for irreligious criticism and freedom from transcendent obligation. For the individual to finally be liberated from religion, religion must first be emancipated from the state, and this requires the secular state brought about by the development of capitalism. Therefore, before the worker revolution establishes the basis for a classless and stateless society, it must first exploit the prevailing conditions for the development of its advantage, and the nation-state is the framework for the affirmation of social life and political struggle necessary for the revolutionary transformation of everything going forward.

In the Communist Manifesto, Marx and Engels write that, although in “the national struggles of the proletarians of the different countries” the communists “point out and bring to the front the common interests of the entire proletariat, independently of all nationality,” and although the differences and antagonisms “between peoples are daily more and more vanishing, owing to the development of the bourgeoisie, to freedom of commerce, to the world market, to uniformity in the mode of production and in the conditions of life corresponding thereto,” that is through the homogenization of populations, revolutionary politics also requires the organization of diverse groups into a national proletariat for “one national struggle between classes.”

Marx and Engels contend that “the proletariat must first of all acquire political supremacy, must rise to be the leading class of the nation.” Which is why they stress this: “Though not in substance, yet in form, the struggle of the proletariat with the bourgeoisie is at first a national struggle. The proletariat of each country must, of course, first of all settle matters with its own bourgeoisie.” It is only after this that the proletariat can establish the future basis of communism and dissolve into the being of the whole:

When, in the course of development, class distinctions have disappeared, and all production has been concentrated in the hands of a vast association of the whole nation, the public power will lose its political character. Political power, properly so called, is merely the organised power of one class for oppressing another. If the proletariat during its contest with the bourgeoisie is compelled, by the force of circumstances, to organise itself as a class, if, by means of a revolution, it makes itself the ruling class, and, as such, sweeps away by force the old conditions of production, then it will, along with these conditions, have swept away the conditions for the existence of class antagonisms and of classes generally, and will thereby have abolished its own supremacy as a class.

The logic of their analysis—taking the standpoint of class struggle—led Marx and Engels to recommend the dissolution of Great Britain (they were something of early Brexiteers); the Irish worker disrupted the formation of class consciousness among the British proletariat in the same way black slaves undermined working class solidarity in the United States via proletarian identification with the capitalists class on the basis of race. In Marx’s letter to Abraham Lincoln, signed by members of International Working Men’s Association and presented to US Ambassador Charles Francis Adams on January 28, 1865:

While the workingmen, the true political powers of the North, allowed slavery to defile their own republic, while before the Negro, mastered and sold without his concurrence, they boasted it the highest prerogative of the white-skinned laborer to sell himself and choose his own master, they were unable to attain the true freedom of labor, or to support their European brethren in their struggle for emancipation; but this barrier to progress has been swept off by the red sea of civil war.

This is not to blame the Irish worker or the African slave for racism; they were just as exploited by their capitalist oppressor as the rest of those whose labor the capitalist exploited. It is to grasp, in the context of imperialism, the international actions of capitalists with respect to the less developed (indeed, underdeveloped) countries and regions of the world as a strategy for securing cheap resources and labor. Globalization is a strategy not only aimed at maximizing surplus value production for the promise of greater profits, but to interrupt the formation of the proletariat into a national force capable of wresting control of the state from the bourgeoisie. Thwarting class consciousness lies sat the core of the neoliberal strategy of identity politics and multiculturalism. 

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I am also a secular humanist. Because of my grounding in Marxism, I reject the postmodern notion that the secular humanism is just one among many equally valid frameworks for establishing rules for human interactions. Marx’s critique of religion represents a paradigm of how to proceed on the problem of truth. The theocratic principle that all social relations and conduct should be under the thumb of religious doctrine, to draw a contrast, is not merely an inferior notion with respect to human freedom and social progress; it is oppressive and wrong. 

When Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne emperor in 800 AD, he established the tradition that secular leaders were properly subordinated to the authority of the Church. As at the genesis of the state in ancient Sumer—at Eridu, Uruk, and Ur their gods lent their authority to their kings—Yahweh determined the legitimacy of the earthly ruler through the Catholic Church. The Christians of Rome choose to identify themselves as katholikos, from the Greek words kata or kath, meaning “through” or “throughout,” and holos, meaning “whole.” They chose this construction—and not the Latin universalis—because their ambitions were totalitarian. They did not mean to simply reach everybody, but to command everything.

Reformation did little to tame the Catholic desire to dominate law and politics; the Church continued to assert for itself a privileged position in states where other doctrines emerged from the shadow of hegemonic theism. It was not until 1965, one hundred and seventy-one years after delegates to the Constitutional Convention (only two of whom were Catholic) established the American Republic, that the second Vatican Council issued its “Declaration on Religious Liberty,” in which separation of church and state was recognized as a principle that “frees a church and its members from the coercive power of the state so that the exercise of religion is unimpeded.” Thus they did not seek the separation because they believed the religious should bow to the secular; the Vatican did not seek man’s liberation from religion, but the liberation of religion from reason.

The postcolonial view that the system of human rights is the product of western white culture and therefore intrinsically oppressive is objectionable as the postmodern notion of plural truth. Indeed, it it its cousin. The notion that all cultures should be respected with the exception of the western outlook, that the mistreatment of women and gays and lesbians is justified on the grounds of cultural relativism—these are regressive notions. To be sure, culture is relative, but morality and truth are not; they are mind independent and objectively determinable. To say they are mind independent is not to say they are handed down from the heavens, but that they are social facts emergent from the needs of humans and the demands of social intercourse. Moreover, culture is properly subject to rational and empirical assessment and, if found inadequate to the needs of people, in turn subject to criticism and even ridicule. Not all cultures are created or emerge equal with respect to human wellbeing and actualization—indeed, many cultures and traditions are leveraged to perpetuate inequality and injustice.

It is on this basis of science and socialism that I make my choice of comrades. However, tragically, many on the left today align their politics with world bourgeois notions of globalism, identity, and multiculturalism, projects that, while deploying a rhetoric of social justice, fracture consciousness and set the working class against itself in order to discipline and disrupt labor and confuse the socialist movement. We hear it in rhetoric characterizing the native-born as immigrants in their own country, in the racialization and ethnization of immigrants, in the charge of collective guilt—not in the failure of members of working class to pull together, but smearing those who resist those forces pulling the working class apart. The neoliberals, those who strive to push commodification into every layer of the social bed, exploit white guilt and the emotional need to virtue signal by the victims of it. Capitalists use it as a weapon to demoralize and disorganize national proletariats in order to incorporate them into transnational structures of governance without democratic redress. And they have found allies among the proletarian masses.

The socialist nationalism I advocate is not to be confused with reactionary and destructive ideology of national socialism. These terms represent polar opposite positions; each aims for completely different ends. Indeed, the words that make up these terms don’t carry the same meanings. For the fascist, nationalism is ethnic chauvinism and belligerent xenophobia, aiming for the racial organization of society. The national socialists wanted a Germany in which ethnic Germans were the master race and other races were subordinated or eliminated. A Marxist rejects the ethnic or racial organization of society and advocates instead for civic nationalism, a government organized around the rights of the individual and a substantial degree of popular suffrage for all without regard to identity. The communist goal is to create a world without segmentation along lines of class, ethnicity, and race. Whatever the concept of socialism means to the fascist, it is not a Marxian socialism. National socialists were  dedicated anti-Marxist and anti-communist agents. Their allegiance was not to the working class over against the capitalist class, but to the German race against other races. And because the German industrialist and banker represented the cream of the crop, the national socialist regime served their interests over against the proletariat’s. As Walter Benjamin noted in the Epilogue to his 1936 “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction”: 

The growing proletarianization of modern man and the increasing formation of masses are two aspects of the same process. Fascism attempts to organize the newly created proletarian masses without affecting the property structure which the masses strive to eliminate. Fascism sees its salvation in giving these masses not their right, but instead a chance to express themselves. The masses have a right to change property relations; Fascism seeks to give them an expression while preserving property. The logical result of Fascism is the introduction of aesthetics into political life. The violation of the masses, whom Fascism, with its Führer cult, forces to their knees, has its counterpart in the violation of an apparatus which is pressed into the production of ritual values.

A socialist nationalism seeks the diametric opposite of the outcome Benjamin identifies: we seek to preserve the republican conditions that allow for individually differentiated conduct and popular political participation, that is, conditions necessary for the progressive advance of freedom and democracy. 

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I have written about the capitalist strategy to undermine the proletariats throughout the world through open borders (see “The Need for Limits”). The remainder of present essay examines the use of the smear “nativist” to delegitimize advocates of immigration restrictions. I make this critique to clarify emancipatory notions of nationalism. I am seeking to defend nationalism against those who would reduce it to racism. 

By emancipatory nationalism I mean the progressive emancipation of the individual from tribal associations—from those oppressive relations that demand individuals be in some fashion reduced to their race, ethnicity, or religion and controlled by these group identities—and reincorporation into a national system that elevates the individual to a position of civil, political, and social equality. A national system insists on a common language so that everybody can dialogue (but does not restrict the languages spoken or the ideas they carry) and a common culture that values and upholds humanism, liberalism, and secularism. These are not features to be condemned, but to be upheld.

Yet the nation in this sense is maligned by the progressive activist for its very virtues. The nation-state is said to be an artificial construct that violently forces together and molds peoples with different cultures, languages, and religions (presumed to be organic) into a single entity where they are all subjected to the same fixed national culture which expects of them the same obligations to serve the state. I am here essentially quoting Noam Chomsky, an anarchist whose views on nationalism depend on whether he is talking about oppressor nations or oppressed nations, the latter entitled to exclusive ethnic nationalism. 

It is an odd position for an anarchist to take. Suppose a territory in which there are multiple cultures, all governing themselves based on their own rules. Some of the culture areas are theocratic and patriarchal, where women are forced to cover themselves, not allowed to go outside the home without male relatives, and subject to arranged marriages and corporal punishment. Persons in those areas are subject to genital mutilation and scarification that mark them as members of the tribe. Such systems are exclusive, oppressive, and totalitarian in their orientation. These are examples of the types of cultures whose rights the modern nation violates (as if cultures are persons). 

For Chomsky, if nation in this sense accentuates the richness and authenticity of particular cultures and traditions, then it is a laudable exercise. (No gods? No masters?) Yet such systems are intrinsically closed and exclusive, subjecting persons not to a rational system based on an equal distribution of individual liberty and rights (where human rights obtain), but to irrational customs and conventions based on the authority of hierarchy and tradition. For someone who ridicules postmodernism, Chomsky paradoxically takes for his own position on the question of nationalism a remarkably postmodern view in which third world people are not entitled to the human rights western individuals enjoy (because the West is hypocritical). After all, the Declaration of Human Rights is about persons, and each person, and therefore “all human beings,” are “endowed with reason and conscience” and “are born free and equal in dignity and rights” (quoting from the Declaration). These human beings are part of the same species only artificially divided into classes, ethnicities, races, and religions. Chomsky and his ilk abandon the individual to the tyranny of her culture.

To be sure, the formation of the modern rational nation-state has a bloody history (not in every case, but in most), but the nation in the civic sense has liberated or is liberating women from patriarchal doctrine, homosexuals from compulsory heterosexuality, children from oppressive parental ownership, human beings from slavery, and the human mind from ignorance. Emancipatory nationalism creates a system focused on individual rights and individual rights are human rights, universal and objectively ascertainable and determinable through reason and science. Chomsky even admits that the moral progress humans have made in the West has been of this quality—progress that could only occur uniformly under modern nations. 

In a 2017 piece,“What is a Nativist, published in The Atlantic, Uri Friedman wonders “why, when it would seem to raise valid questions about the rights of natives versus non-natives, does nativism have such negative associations?” But is it really nativist (as used as a derogatory label) to defend the interests of native-born and naturalized citizens against the ambitions of capitalists and immigrants? The answer to this question depends on what one means by the term “nativism.”

The term “nativism” appears amid the mid-19th century concern with growing presence of Germans and Irish Catholic in the United States. Native-born Protestants perceived German and Irish Catholics as a threat to the national culture. Protestants worried about the loyalty of the new arrivals to American republicanism that had enshrined the value of secularism and religious pluralism in its Constitution. Most of those who founded the US Republic professed deism (the Enlightenment theism of nature and reason) or were  Protestants influenced by deism, confessing belief in Christian teachings but rejecting or expressing rational skepticism in supernatural claims.

Unlike Protestants, Catholics were loyal to an international order that stood above and apart from the nation-state. That order was as much political as anything. And it was theocratic. Unlike Catholics, many Protestants had separated themselves from the idea that a religious faith should dictate the law. They agreed with John Locke who said, “No peace and security among mankind—let alone common friendship—can ever exist as long as people think that governments get their authority from God.” Theirs was no irrational fear; they found the prospect of an ideology antithetical to the secular way of life insinuating itself into American law, politics, and culture troubling on rational grounds.

I can hear readers shifting in their seats. “Didn’t we get over this with Kennedy?” (As if Mormonism became acceptable because Mitt Romney reassured the public during his presidential campaign that his religious views would not direct the nation). But something must be said about the problem of painting anti-Catholicism as the “antisemitism of the liberals” (as conservative poet Peter Viereck put it) or as an inseparable part of racist ideology, such as the brand of hatred the Ku Klux Klan peddles, something we have been hearing a lot about lately. Exposing this canard (an especially absurd and, really, insulting parallel given the centuries of Catholic oppression of Jews, including a major role in European fascism and the Holocaust) illuminates the point of this essay—to whit, the problem of theism is the justification for civic nationalism. 

Stridently opposed to abortion and even contraception, the Catholic Church endeavors to marginalize public support for and acceptance of reproductive liberty, a project imperiling the advance of women’s rights. Catholicism remains a barrier to moral progress. The latest marker in the Catholic anti-woman campaign is the ascension of Brett Kavanaugh to associate justice of the Supreme Court. Kavanaugh’s confirmation is yet another step in the political-religious project to roll back liberalism, that culture that marks the beginning of female emancipation.

See, Catholics have been at this for a long time. In November 1975, the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and the US Catholic Conference published the document “A Pastoral Plan for Pro-Life Activities: A Campaign in Support of Life,” launching a campaign to push the agenda of right-wing Catholicism into Protestant consciousness. Anti-choice Catholic activities fractured the Democratic Party along moral lines. Seeing political advantage, right-wing evangelicals and Republicans moved to incorporate Catholic sentiment into the philosophy of the party, amplifying the worst Catholic tendencies. By 2000, half of all Catholic were Republicans, where a majority of evangelical Protestants joined them in a coalition that is profoundly changing US political culture, reversing decades of social progress.

Today, Catholics dominate the Supreme Court (there are no Protestants on the court and only three Jews remain to defend liberalism in its expansive sense albeit sadly imperfectly), and while the public is well aware of the threat to reproductive freedom the current composition of the court represents, they are loathe to see this threat as a consequence of religious persuasion because they have been indoctrinated to believe that antitheism and irreligious criticism—the highest forms of rationality—represent forms of bigotry akin to ethnic or race prejudice, an utterly false conflation that shames people into silence with tragic results. (We also see this happening with the Islam.) Catholicism has grown in strength in large measure because generations have been told that criticism of Catholic dogma is “anti-Catholic bigotry.”

The attempt to pair anti-Catholicism with white nationalism and white supremacy falls flat, as Catholicism was the principle ideology driving European colonization and the creation of the world patterns of poverty, and remains a major source of antisemitism on the continent of Europe. Catholic immigrants embraced the legacy of the butcher Christopher Columbus, a devout member of the tribe, to show their loyalty to the (worst of the) American idea. The right spent billions of dollars to paint opposition to Kavanaugh as “anti-religious,” specifically anti-Catholic. But then so what if it was? Catholics are responsible for untold cruelty and misery across the centuries. Catholicism, like Islam, is not analogous to ethnic or racial minorities. These ideologies are akin to fascism. They cannot hide behind accusations of bigotry.

The foregoing was not merely a digression into Catholic-bashing. I am using the Catholic experience to demonstrate how rational secular concerns are silenced by characterizing them as some form of prejudice or discrimination. It’s a tactic. The tactic of nativism as a characterization of an expression of a particular intellectual and, in some sense, religious tradition—rationalist, individualist, liberal—proved useful in opening up US society to immigrants formed by different and sometimes incompatible and even harmful cultural traditions. The effort to protect their traditions became evidence against their character; the native-born were not entitled to expect that preservation of the American way of life was a noble or rational cause. Thus, we can think of the charge of nativism as a forerunner of the postmodern critique of modernity—that is, the claim that there is nothing intrinsically good about the values of humanism, liberalism, and secularism and therefore it is fine and good to allow Islam to move substantively uncompromised into free and democratic cultural spaces, where they have harmed and limited communities in every historical instance.

The charge of nativism was used during the period of mass immigration 1880-1920s to malign sentiment in favor of restrictions. As I have written in previous blogs, labor unions supported restrictions not because they were what we would describe today as racist and xenophobic, but because migrants from Eastern and Southern Europe were used by capitalists to drive down wages, disrupt labor solidarity, and hinder the work of unions. The native-born worker understood that capitalists imported low-skill populations from Europe to discipline labor and thwart its political development. Moreover, Immigrants destabilized neighborhoods and disorganized communities, frustrating the native born. Just as workers worried that alien religious ideas threatened the stability of US political culture, workers were rightly concerned that low-skilled, low-wage labor would undermine their livelihoods and collective power.

The question is this: who benefits from marginalizing those who complain about harm to the working class caused by immigration?

If by nativism one means to convey the presence of ethnic bigotry, racism, or xenophobia, can concern for the future of the republic, for secure and decent-paying jobs, for safe and orderly communities really be characterized as such? Surely the reader can see the thought-stopping power of the charge and the forces that lie behind it. It assumes what requires proof. Tilt the tables and ask whether, when people say assimilation is a “racist code word,” they really mean to say that, not only is there no value in integration, but that the desire to strengthen solidarity around our core values and laws is a bad thing. 

The characterization of the desire for national self-preservation as wrong-headed and bigoted presumes that the rational legal and political principles and values that mark the American republic as distinctive and special is problematic and unworthy of defending, that the United States can exist as an cohesive entity irrespective of the ideas and traditions shaping its future. Or perhaps there is a desire that the United States not exist as a cultural system at all, that it becomes a territory without ideals—the postmodern pipe dream—that it should exist as nothing rather than something (that territory I earlier asked you to imagine). But then there is the demand for the integrity of foreign cultures. Baum’s noble savages—Kipling’s white man’s burden—in new and improved form.

By suggesting that opposition to religious ideology and the importation of cheap labor is not nativism, I am questioning the assumption that the motive to restrict immigration is always or for the most part driven by the ethnic chauvinism that characterizes nativist sympathies. I am operating with a particular definition of nativism that is not so broad as to cover all immigration-restrictive sentiment. Nativism is not merely the native-born response to the effect of immigrants on the host society; it is an attitude characterized by an intemperate faith in ethnic superiority. Nativism sees other ethnicities as inferior, even dangerous, not out of reason but out of an irrational fear and loathing of the other.

Nativism is an American term paralleling such European terms as ultranationalism and xenophobic nationalism. Nativism is belligerent nationalism. Yet many on the left are conflating nationalism—pride in one’s country and identification with its values—with chauvinism and jingoism. In their hands, the charge of nativism is a sledgehammer used to pound dissent to the goals of globalism into dust. Where established populations have a valid objection to immigration, the charge of nativism is a weapon to delegitimize the source of that objection.

In discussions surrounding immigration, while the parties may use the same terms, they do not do so with the same meanings in mind. At the core of the confusion is a failure to deal honestly with the concept of the nation. Nation has two basic meanings. One is a political-juridical unit with a sovereign state and an independent government covering a defined territory. The other is a group of people having a common cultural tradition, including a language and shared worldview, often referred to by the term “ethnicity.” There is overlap in these meanings, but they are not reducible to each other. The term “nation-state” is sometimes used to identify a situation in which the state is coterminous; however, it is possible to have a language and shared cultural values apart from common ethnicity.  

It is more precise, therefore, to distinguish between two types of nationalism: civic nationalism and ethnic nationalism. Civic, or liberal nationalism is marked by values (principles or standards that embed in behavioral norms) of equality before the law, individuals liberties and rights, pluralism and tolerance. Ethnic nationalism (or ethnonationalism) is an ideology expressing the idea that a nation is defined in terms of its second meaning, an emphasis on common ancestry and religion—in other words, that the political-juridical unit should be coextensive with a dominant ethnic or racial group.

One of the hallmarks of liberal nationalism is secularism, which is the principle of separation of the state from religious institutions and practices (or rituals), as well as a general attitude disfavoring religious ideas in the formation of law and policy. This system maximizes individual liberty while respecting persons before the law regardless of their race, gender, and so on. To draw a historical contrast, examples of ethnic nationalism include Nazi Germany, which sought to raise the status of ethnic Germans over other ethnicities in German law and policy, and Israel, which declares itself to be a Jewish state, relegating other ethnicities within its territory to second-class citizenship. Religious nationalism operates in a similar fashion to ethnic nationalism and the two are sometimes intertwined, although there are theocracies in which multiple ethnicities and races are treated independent of religious belief (for example Islamic states).

Ethnic nationalism is marked by xenophobia, ethnocentrism, and racism, what in the United States is called nativism. Nativists are concerned with losing white Christian civilization. Transcending white Christian civilization is a goal of Marxian socialism.

* * *

Those on the left who desire to see an end to the nation-state with regional and world systems and open borders substitute a wish for the reality of the world. The globalist agenda is not a socialist agenda. It is an expression of capitalist expansionism. Immigration is not an humanitarian effort to provide comfort to the victims of capitalism (as if workers in the West are not victims of the same system). Immigration is a process of importing human capital to maximize surplus value production in pursuit of profit and leisure for the capitalist class. Capitalist bring foreign-born workers to the West to super-exploit them.

Until the world is won for socialism, the nation remains the territory of class struggle. The interests of native-born and naturalized workers still matter because it is upon these interests that the national proletariat builds its politics. Borders are potential bulwarks not only against neoliberal globalization and political disorganization, but against such regressive and totalitarian ideas as Islam.

The Neoliberal Assumption of Educational Programming

I read this essay at the Wisconsin Sociological Association Meeting in La Crosse, Wisconsin the morning. 

One of the chief objectives of the neoliberal program to devolve the public sphere and weaken democratic institutions and traditions is the elimination of progressive and creative educational programming committed to cultivating “thought leaders” concerned with broad community interests.

Imparting the skills of identifying complex problems and bringing into focus their many and interconnecting dimensions by teaching people to think across disciplines and consider multiple perspectives, as well as encouraging faculty, staff, students, and graduates to work with communities to develop comprehensive solutions to those problems is too disruptive to the corporate command of society.

Pushing back against the ideological notion that solutions to the societal problems of joblessness, crime, and addiction are to be found in personal adjustment and adaptation, and instead teaching people to see collective circumstances and undemocratic power as barriers to autonomy and well-being, problem-focused programming promotes an engaged and vigorous public life, fuel for the democratic movements that challenge the hegemony of the corporate bureaucratic control.

In contrast to classical liberal and social democratic conceptions of education, neoliberal and conservative forces seek to transfer the commonwealth function of public institutions to technocratic machinery governed by business and administrative elites, a narrow and specialized bureaucratic framework generating fragmented and siloed knowledge for the benefit of the aristocracy of capital.

Neoliberal “reformers” envision education as a network of business platforms with interchangeable and exclusive program codes that homogenize and commandeer expertise to stamp out workers for employment in ever more rationalized systems.

The neoliberal tendency is not just about profit maximization. Entrenching bureaucratic rationalization fuels the growth of authoritarian control. Bureaucratic state capitalism has little tolerance for democracy except as a symbolic exercise in manufacturing consent.

The steps being undertaken to affect this transformation are seen in, among other things:

  • the assault on faculty (or shared) governance, tenure, and academic freedom;
  • efforts to undermine educator prestige (teacher bashing) and waging war on public teachers unions;
  • aggressive intervention of business class representatives in the decision-making process of educational institutions;
  • taking, in part or in whole, control over programming and pedagogical method and format away from faculty (for example in textbook selection committees);
  • the homogenization and interchangeability of programming and the manufacture of distinctiveness in signature programs tailored to business and business-serving governmental ends;
  • the reduction of general education to cultural literacy and skills development;
  • the shifting of the costs of education from the taxpayer to students and their families;
  • the cooptation and grooming of members of the professoriate and academic staff to carry out the neoliberal agenda on the ground.

The last bullet point is the consequence of the effect of neoliberal reform, but its existence moves the agenda forward. By substituting the needs of the community with the needs of business dressed up as community interests, neoliberalism cultivates a different type of academic: the entrepreneurial-minded operative drawn into circumscribed associations and professions tied to and subservient to and uncritical of elite power. Deferential to corporate power, the entrepreneurial academic, uncontroversial and adept at making small talk, stands down his principles for the sake institutional advancement and personal enrichment.

As neoliberal logic and practice invade and occupy our social space, its emergent subjectivity threatens to colonize the lifeworld of the academic, separating individuals from the group and assimilating them in projects that undermine the university’s historic mission: to impart and transform knowledge for the benefit of the commonwealth. Resistance to the forces of neoliberal requires critical praxis and solidarity work. Unfortunately, life training in the capitalist values of hierarchy and obedience prepare many individuals for alienation from their peers and cooptation by neoliberal forces.

This is not to say that the work of the administrator cannot be for the good of the community. Many of us have counted on allies in administration. But power tends to select those who advance its goals and filter out those who resist them. The question of who is in power remains a relevant one. Indeed, this is why faculty governance is so crucial to the preservation of the university as an institution for the public good and not an instrument of corporate power.

 

Crime Blotter: A Mixed Bag

Some (preliminary) good news on the UCR violent crime front. We have to wait to see if this is a trend, but after growing significantly over the second half of the Obama presidency (I use this mark for periodization) by percentages of 6.2 and 5.2 overall, the violent crime rate shrunk in the last cycle (2017/2016) by -0.8%. Significantly, rape is down (-2.8%) and so is robbery (-2.2%). Murder continues to increase, but the annual increase of 1.5% is significantly less than the previous two cycles (2015/2014 6.2% and 2016/2015 5.2%). Aggravated assault is down, but only slightly. These declines are likely due to robust economic growth improving the conditions of those demographics associated with higher violent crime rates. This would also explain the drop in property crime (-2.9%) with significant decreases in burglary (-6.1%) and theft-larceny (-3.0%).

Murder is stubborn for various reasons. African Americans are six times more likely that European Americans to be murder victims (approximately half of all homicide victims are black), while Hispanics are almost three times more likely to be homicide victims than non-Hispanics. Crime for both of these demographics is overwhelmingly a within-group phenomenon. A big piece of this is gangs, not just surrounding the drug trade, but generally violent intragroup dynamics. One reason for the high rates is that insufficient resources are deployed to catch and punish the killers of black and brown people. Blacks and browns are, as Harvard’s Randall Kennedy puts it, racially selective under protected. But the main reason remains persistent inequality in our inner cities and the culture of violence it generates. Inequality is the chief predictor of violent crime, especially murder. Murder and our inner cities—Baltimore, St. Louis, Kanas City, New Orleans—continues at alarming levels, between 10 and 19 percent for cities of 250 to 999 thousand. This is true for cities throughout the western world.

You Cannot Hide Your Crimes in the Past

Those defending Brett Kavanaugh make a lot out of time between when his alleged actions took place and when his accusers came forward. They claim this speaks to his innocence. Is Bill Cosby innocent because his sixty victims didn’t come forwards years ago? Think about it for a minute: Cosby was able to drug and rape women, the earliest known cases dating to the mid-1960s, without a lot of people suspecting him of these heinous crimes. A hardcore life-long sexual predator and it took years for his crimes to surface. That his crimes went effectively undetected is a reason he was able to keep repeating them. He is finally a convicted rapist and he is going to prison for it, but prison is not what makes his drugging and raping real. It was real long before he was brought to justice.

Catholic priests have been molesting children for decades. It took years for that to come out, too. And it’s still coming out. How could these priests and their superiors have hidden thousands of victims for so many decades in so many churches without very many people knowing? Bishops and other leaders of the Roman Catholic Church in Pennsylvania covered up child sexual abuse by more than 300 priests over a period of seventy years (Catholic Priests Abused 1,000 Children in Pennsylvania, Report Says). Why did those who did know not come forward? These were children being criminally violated. How does this happen? How do rapists hide repeated sexual assault from parents? Should we think of priests as innocent of these heinous crimes because their victims didn’t come forward?

Why are people defending sexual predators by asking questions that any person with even a passing knowledge of victimology knows the answer to? Criminologists have known for a very long time that sexual predation flies under the radar screen because women are scared of being ruined for telling the truth. Their fear is reasonable. Look at what conservatives are doing to Christine Blasey Ford, one of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s victims. The way she has been treated is Exhibit A for why women are reluctant to come forward with their experiences. There are those who wish to keep sexual assault and harassment quiet and continuing, so they keep the victims in the shadows through shame and intimidation.

But we are having a popular awakening to the fact that sexual assault has been rampant in US history and that perpetrators cannot hide their crimes in the past. Fear is contagious, but so is courage, and here comes the boomerang.

Brett Kavanaugh and Gynophobia

The same people who want to control the womb are very often the same people who don’t really have a problem with men forcing themselves on women (unless it’s his woman) – indeed, who are likely to be the men who force themselves on women. Kavanaugh represents what they’re about: the boy’s club. Their motto: “Boys will be boys.” They desperately want #MeToo to go away because they know that, while fear is contagious, so is courage, and Kavanaugh is their magic boy to stick it to all the sexual assault victims coming forward – perhaps before their own pasts are exposed.

What are they so afraid of? Women. They’re terrified of women. This is why they treat the accusations as if they amount to witch hysteria. What lies at the heart of the freakout is gynophobia, a deep and pathological fear and loathing of women. Eve gave Adam the forbidden fruit. The woman conspired with the serpent to deceive the man, the first human, to ruin paradise. But for her, he’d be pure and living at the foothills of Heaven. Women have a penchant for falsely accusing men of rape; their souls manufactured below, women use sex as a weapon. They are the corrupters of men. Their sexuality must be controlled and regulated for Heaven’s sake. When it comes to matters of the flesh, men are weak and manipulable. They can’t help themselves. Such is the lure of the siren. Men are the true victims – the victims of manifestations of Cathy Ames of John Steinbeck’s East of Eden. Psychic monsters with malformed souls.

Projection is at the core of the Abrahamic traditions. When the abusive father is having his authority questioned there is a crisis. This is contempt of natural power – the natural order of things! So desperate are the boys to preserve the patriarchy – and so many stand alongside them rationalizing it all the way, including the girls – that they can deny with a straight and angry face the truth of what compassionate and empathic observers can plainly see.

And then there is this: the keg and quaalude cohort was large in the early 1980s. They reflect on their Kavanaugh pasts, the red cup and PGA punch world they still high five over, and think “That was rape?” There is a large reserve of organic support for Brett. If he was wrong, then they were wrong. All those nights they don’t remember. It’s a lot more satisfying to sit back and think, “I could have sat on the Supreme Court.” Bart absolves them of their sins – if they were to suppose that that’s what they are. 

This is why feminism is still relevant: it is the frame that demystifies the power of the father – the power that makes boys special.

Law Enforcement and Family Separation

When there is probable cause that a crime has occurred, or in effecting an arrest warrant, law enforcement will attempt to take the subject in question into custody. In making an arrest, officers often find it necessary to do so with family members present. Officers should secure the subject in the safest manner possible while respecting due process; however it is not uncommon for children to be separated from parents in the process. Children will remain separated from parents during periods of confinement. For obvious reasons, children cannot accompany parents to jails, prisons, or, typically, detention facilities. Family separation is thus a commonplace occurrence in societies with a modern law enforcement apparatus. Emotional distress is neither unlikely nor unexpected in these situations and, unfortunately, there is often very little that can be done to avoid it, albeit there are ways to minimize it (which is not the subject of the present essay).

Family separation during deportation proceedings is a common experience in communities with large numbers of immigrants who have entered the country illegally or overstayed their visas. Total deportations by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) hovered around 400,000 persons annually in each of the first four years of Obama’s presidency. In many of these cases, there were children who were separated from parents while their cases were adjudicated and, in some instances, remained in the United States after their parents were deported, either turned over to relatives or placed in foster care. Obama also stepped up border controls, apprehending and detaining tens of thousands before returning them to the other side of border. Obama deported more immigrants than any other president, which effectively makes him a leader in family separation. In total, 2.5 million immigrants were deported during the Obama presidency. Obama pursued his strategy of certain and swift deportation in order to deter immigrants from Central America. The strategy was effective, sharply reducing the numbers of those attempting to illegally cross the border. There was little opposition to Obama’s policies by Democrats.

What motivated Obama’s aggressive policy of deterrence? There are at least eleven million persons in the United States who are here illegally (probably more) and their presence is associated with significant social injury, including lower wages and displacement for native-born workers and those with valid work visas, overburdened public services, neighborhood disorganization and overcrowding, and, for urban areas, higher levels of crime and violence (for more on this see The Immigration Situation). Citizens and residents who are legally in the country rightly expect the government to enforce immigration laws to protect jobs and public services and keep neighborhoods safe and orderly. Again, if this can be done in a way that minimizes fallout for families, this should be inform policy; but if there is a desire to control immigration—and immigration control makes sense from the standpoint of the interests of labor—then some some mixture of action that includes deportation will be the appropriate federal policy.

Yet we are seeing an attitude on the left, from those who presume to speak for working people, that manufactures depictions of law enforcement as unjustly oppressing a community by detaining and arresting immigrants who are here illegally as if they were members of a minority targeted on the basis of ethnic or racial identity. The comparisons are hardly subtle; analogies are being drawn between law enforcement and the Nazi SS. There are calls from the left for local and state governments to interfere with law enforcement efforts by providing sanctuary for undocumented workers. There are even calls to abolish critical law enforcement agencies, such as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). To be sure, because the perception that immigration is dominated by Mexicans and other Latin American nationalities, those with brown skin or who speak Spanish are suspected of being illegal immigrants and stopped and harassed. These  reasons do not rise to the level of reasonable suspicion. Discrimination of this sort does not negate the principle of immigration control. 

The social injury caused by illegal immigration requires remedy, and one way to advance just redress of grievances in any domain of criminal violations is to identify those who break the law and hold them accountable. In the case of immigration, the desire to see law enforcement fail in their duty or the call for agencies to be abolished in order to prevent the law from being enforced is tantamount to calling for open borders. Sweden opened its borders in 2015 with terrible results. Tens of thousands entered the country overwhelming Sweden’s capacity to provide for its citizens and causing a sharp increase in poverty, crime, and violence. The proportion of foreign-born in Sweden now exceeds eight percent. Without open borders, the situation is worse in the United States. This nation hasn’t seen the percentage of foreign-born at it current levels (around 14 percent), since the late nineteenth century. Pushed by working class concern over wages and living conditions, the government passed laws tightening our borders in late 19th and early 20th centuries (see The Need for Limits), reducing the percentage of foreign-born persons to five percent by the 1960s, a period of unprecedented prosperity for American workers. Since then, as the proportion of foreign-born has grown again, the material circumstances of working people has deteriorated and the class has become politically disorganized.

Second, family separation is not a special reason to refrain from enforcing the law. If it were, then this would bring enforcement of any criminal statute into question, since those also result in family separation. More than 1.5 million children under age 18 have a parent in state or federal prison. That represents more than two percent of the total US child population. Only a portion of those arrested and convicted are sent to prison, so the number of children separated from parents at other stages of the criminal justice process is much greater. It would be strange to hear a cry in favor of abolishing the city police because taking property offenders into custody causes children to be separated from parents who break the law. Indeed, we don’t hear such cries.

Third, the idea of sanctuary is contrary to the doctrine of federal power central to the logic of Constitution of the United States. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is the law enforcement agency in charge of this domain of criminal activity.  Because of the Supremacy Clause in the US constitution, federal agencies have authority over local and state law enforcement agencies and jurisdictions. Article VI, Paragraph 2 of the US Constitution establishes that federal law supersedes state laws and constitutions. Crucially, this article prohibits states from interfering with the federal government’s exercise of its constitutional powers. A local or state government cannot compromise the safety and security of US citizens by standing in the way of federal law enforcement agencies. We are first citizens of the United States. We depend on the federal government to defend our safety and security however irresponsibly state and local governments may behave. As much as I loath the drug war, federal drug laws supersede the drug laws at the state and local level. 

Finally, opposition to immigration enforcement typically uses rhetoric falsely equating immigrants to members of a minority group in the way that concept is applied to racial or ethnic groups. Immigrants are not a racial or ethnic group but an aggregate made up of many races and ethnicities. Immigrants do not represent a group-in-itself. Immigrants tend to settle in racial and ethnic communities as they seek familiar surroundings. This is as true of Swedes as it is of Mexicans. But an illegal immigrant in either community is subject to detention or arrest on the basis of the violation of the law, including residing in a country he is not legally authorized to reside in. Treating immigrants who are breaking the law as if they constitute a minority group and are being arrested on that basis is like treating those who perpetrate property or violent crimes as if they are members of a protected minority. This is why, as Peter Skerry notes, the traditional civil rights language applied to the black struggle for equality does not apply to immigrants. It is a confusion of categories.

Immigration refers to movement of non-citizens from one state or territory to another state or territory. Illegal immigration is in contravention of a country’s immigration laws. Neither Republicans nor Democrats advocate stopping immigration enforcement. And while a minority of Democrats calls for the abolition of ICE, most Democrats do not. Polls of registered voters find that nearly two-thirds express the view that immigration control is inadequate and eighty percent want secure borders. Some might suppose based on this that a majority of Americans are anti-immigrant, but the desire for immigration control and secure borders is not a reflection of anti-immigrant sentiment. It is not nativist, racist, or xenophobic. It is a recognition of the importance of borders and immigration law to the wellbeing of a nation. At the same time, the United States is the most generous nation in the world with respect to immigration. It is the first choice of immigrants and, because of this, and because of relaxed immigration control, it has the largest proportion of foreign-born persons of any country. Indeed, more progressive countries, such as Sweden, have more restrictive immigration and naturalization policy (such as the principle of sui sanguinis).

It is difficult to develop a sound immigration policy and enforcement strategy when calling for a rational approach to the problem, which will necessarily involve restrictions and deportation, are reflexively smeared as prejudice and discrimination. As Peter Skerry notes, “complaints [about immigration] get branded as anti-immigrant, bigoted and racist, as if there’s no rational basis for them at all. I would submit to you, that there’s often a rational basis for them.” He continues: “there is some reason for the strains that we’ve had, but we don’t want to face up to them because we constantly place them in this racial category and denounce those who are voicing them as racist.” Elsewhere Skerry writes that the attempt to restrict immigration “is invariably out- organized by well-funded and sophisticated immigrant advocates, allied with business and others elites who benefit from on-going high levels of immigration.” Columbia University economist Donald Davis, an immigration advocate, admitted that “there are aspects of discussion in academia that don’t get sort of full view if you come to the wrong conclusion” (“How the Democrats Lost Their Way on Immigration“).

Therein lies the problem. Capitalist elites depend on immigrants as a super-exploitable labor supply to secure higher profits, a strategy that comes at the expense of working people. Elites have spent decades shaping how the public thinks about this issue, and they have recognized that recruiting to their side progressive multiculturalists who are affluent, well-connect, and in a position to shape the narrative for a highly-motivated strata of people who truck in virtue signaling is an effective way of building hegemony in this area. By connecting immigration to the language of civil rights struggles, that is, by recoding immigrants as a racial and ethnic minority (in the same way activists are reframing Islam as a racial category), they have marginalized national proletarian interests for the sake of capitalist advantage.

Demographics and People

In New Orleans, chef Tunde Way opened a food stall asking whites to pay $30 and nonwhites $12 dollars for Nigerian food to see if he could change the way people think about racial wealth disparity in the United States. The two-and-a-half-times differential purports to represent a statistical fact about the disparity between white and black households. Way tells white customers that the extra price paid by whites will subsidize the food for nonwhites. He estimates that 80% of white people pay the extra price.

Tunde Way

Does Way explain to customers that the statistical disparity between grouped means based on selected phenotypic feature does not indicate the actual ability of individual customers to pay? It is entirely possible that some of his white customers will have less money to spend on food than many of his nonwhite customers and, therefore, poorer customers will be subsidizing richer customers. Without knowing the wealth and income of each individual, Way has no way of knowing whether a customer is subsidizing a rich person’s meal – or making a poor person pay an amount that is larger relative to wealth and income. When a poor person pays more for her meal on the basis of skin color, Way is levying what amounts to a regressive tax.

Ironically, Way’s experiment mirrors from an opposite standpoint an experiment conservative students are fond of running at universities: the “affirmative action bake sale,” where customers are charged more money depending on their race, claimed to be an indicator of ability to pay, with Asian customers charged the most and black students charged the least. A variation on this is the “white privilege popcorn giveaway” where white males are given a full bag of popcorn, while persons perceived to lie at other intersections receive less than a full bag. Such social experiments crudely attempt to critique policies that treat concrete persons on the basis of their demographic identity.

Affirmative Action Bake Sale

Way is crudely attempting to educate people by owning the conservative complaint, attributing to individuals social harm and privilege based on demographic identification. Of course, demographic categories do not have such attributes. Moreover, they don’t come with attitudes, beliefs, motives, and actions. His experiment skirts the difference between abstract notions of aggregates and grouped means, on the one hand, and the concrete facticity of individuals and their actual situations, on the other hand. Although the principle of this view of things is dressed up in the language of statistics and social scientific truths, it is the same principle that lies behind collective and intergenerational guilt and punishment. It punishes people for things other people do, for things their ancestors did. 

Take poverty as an example. At the aggregate level, we may indeed note that as a group black people are more likely to report being poor than are whites. In fact, in the aggregate, blacks trail whites in every significant social and economic category, from educational attainment to household income and personal wealth. But at the level of concrete facticity, the black people one encounters may actually be richer than the white persons one encounters. Indeed, since most blacks and whites are not poor (black poverty is around 27% of that demographic), the next random black or white person one meets is unlikely to be poor at all.

An important question in all this is what explains the group disparity. It is in exploring this question that group statistics are important. The sources of the problem are already well understood: the disparity results from racism, defined as a social system with structures and processes that advantage one or more groups over other groups on the basis of an ideology that differentiates people on the basis of ancestry and selected phenotypical characteristics. The advantages are found in patterns of inheritance and institutional behavior that result from history (e.g. slavery, segregation) and on-going social dynamics (e.g. discrimination, over-policing, mass incarceration). We are able to identify causes and effects in part because we collect demographic data on persons.

However, the patterns and dynamics of racism do not tell us about the particular situation of an actual person and they tell us nothing about the guilt and responsibility of individuals. A black person may not have been affected by racism, at least not in any significant or limiting way. It depends on his biography and those of his parents. At the same time, white people are also confronted by history and biography, and these explain their personal situation as much as they do for black people. There are 200 million non-Hispanic whites in the United States. Eighteen million of them live in poverty.

In the age of left-wing identity politics, there is little sympathy among progressive elites and intellectuals for poor whites who are lumped with affluent whites. Nor is there much recognition on the left that benefits may accrue to affluent blacks via government policies that at the same time neglect poor whites. However, when confusing the concrete facts of individuals with the abstract demographic categories with which they are identified functions to harm the fortunes of nonwhites, elites and progressives express a different point of view.

Consider the following real-world example. In capital cases in the state of Texas, juries can either impose the death penalty or impose a penalty of life in prison with the possibility of parole. There is no sentence of life in prison without parole in the state of Texas. One strategy prosecutors seeking the death penalty can pursue is convincing a jury that the defendant is at high risk to repeat his crime and capital punishment removes that risk. Enter Walter Quijano, a psychologist working for the Texas prison system as an expert witness, Quijano testified in several cases that, because of the higher rate of recidivism among blacks compared to whites, black defendants should be subject to the death penalty.

Walter Quijano

At best, “race” describes a constellation of phenotypic characteristics that can be used to classify individuals as belonging to groups. Race does not indicate a propensity of an individual to perpetrate crime. Aggregate statistics tell us nothing about what an individual – black or white, male or female – will or will not do. Indeed, to make this leap is an indication of the presence of race prejudice. It’s what we call stereotyping. To treat individuals of demographic groups on the basis of aggregate statistics is discrimination.

The courts get it. In the case of Duane Buck, who received a sentence of death instead of life imprisonment in a crime of passion, in part because Quijano testified that Buck’s demographic identity made him a greater risk to reoffend, the Supreme Court returned the case to the Fifth US Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans citing discrimination as a factor. Seventeen years earlier, Quijano saw six death sentences, achieved in part with his testimony, repudiated by state attorney general John Cornyn, five of which were concluded with new sentences.

Duane Buck

Let’s consider another example. African American males represent less than six percent of the US population. African American men are responsible for more than half of all homicides recorded by the FBI every year. Yet white anxiety upon seeing a black man approaching is irrational; that black men are overrepresented in homicide does not tell us whether the black man approaching is violent or criminal. When a police officer targets a black man on the basis of race, he may claim to be doing so because of what statistics show about overrepresentation of blacks in crime, but he is engaging in racial profiling. He should be policing on the basis of reasonable suspicion and probable cause. Being black and male is not the reason for black male overrepresentation in homicide and violent crime. It is also true that being white and male does not explain mass shootings. “Black male” is a descriptive category. As such, it has no agency. The same is true with the construct “white male.”

Such category errors are rampant in our society. They are the work of identitarian politics and essentialist thinking. It’s the way racists think. We expect it from racists. We should expect better from ourselves. 

The Immigration Situation

Some of those who seek entry into the United States or who enter and stay here illegally are fleeing from danger for reasons that align with international convention. However, most are not. They are economic migrants, lured across the border by employers who seek to exploit their labor at the expense of native-born workers. Some immigrants come to the United States for the promise of a better life, but others do not intend to stay; they plan to return to their country as soon as they feel they’ve made enough money here. As terrible as criminal violence can be, this is a reason to change the circumstances in one’s country, not flee it.

The effects of immigration on native-born labor is not trivial. When the supply of labor increases, the price of labor (i.e. the wage) decreases. Over the last half century, wages for the most vulnerable native workers have fallen with the increase in the labor supply, and workers in those sectors that absorb the most immigrants have suffered the most. While immigrants come with variable skill levels, it is the low-skilled immigrants that have the biggest impact on native-born workers because they crowd out low-skilled labor, those at the margins of society who are disproportionately black and brown, and who are most likely to be the targets of the agents of coercive control.

The United States absorbs a far greater number of immigrants than other countries, and in the past two decades alone immigrants without high school diplomas have increased the low-skilled workforce by around 25 percent. It’s not just low-skilled sectors; studies of abuse of the H-1B visa program find that tech firms fire native-born workers if cheaper immigrant labor is available. But the working poor suffer the brunt of, in part because they are less able to pivot to something else. Regardless of skill-level, as Professor of Economics and Social Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School professor George J. Borjas points out, “Immigration redistributes wealth from those who compete with immigrants to those who use immigrants—from the employee to the employer.”

The debate over the economic impact of immigrants is typically framed in terms of whether it is a boon or a detriment to the economy. However, this obscures the economic impact of immigration in a manner similar to how per capita GDP figures obscure economic inequality. For the working class as a whole, the presence of immigrant labor results in the transfer of half a trillion dollars from the working class to the capitalist class every year, disproportionately impacting those workers with lower skill levels. The winners of this massive transfer are capitalist firms, who pay significantly less in labor costs, and immigrants, who could not command the same level of pay or enjoy the same living conditions in their home countries. The losers are native-born workers. They not only lose income and livelihoods, but the quality of the conditions of life, while seeing consciousness and the political formation of their social class disrupted. 

Focusing the debate on economics also obscures the social and cultural impact of immigration. The elites who exploit immigrants for super-profits do not care about the crowded living conditions, compromised social services, or the other problems caused by illegal and large-scale immigration. The rich don’t live in those communities so they don’t have to suffer the material and cultural fallout from mass immigration. Working people have to pay for the social problems capitalist create in their pursuit of profit. Immigrants utilize government assistance at higher rates than natives, yet they pay lower taxes (because they have lower earnings), and, in the case of illegal immigration, pay little to no property, payroll, and income taxes. This means that every year a multi-billion-dollar burden is placed upon the shoulders of the native-born population.

Where is the today’s left on the problem of immigration? Only a decade ago I wouldn’t feel so alone in my support for immigration restrictions. Progressive folks on the left were then speaking up on behalf of native-born workers. Glenn Greenwald of The Intercept wrote on his blog in 2005, “Illegal immigration wreaks havoc economically, socially, and culturally; makes a mockery of the rule of law; and is disgraceful just on basic fairness grounds alone.” In 2006, Paul Krugman, professor of economics at the City University of New York, and columnist for The New York Times, wrote, in “Notes on Immigration,” that “immigration reduces the wages of domestic workers who compete with immigrants” and noted that “the fiscal burden of low-wage immigrants is also pretty clear.” He concluded, “We’ll need to reduce the inflow of low-skill immigrants.”

But Greenwald has walked back the sentiments expressed in that blog entry, chalking it up to youthful carelessness and a penchant for provocation. And, in a June 2018 op-ed, Krugman, contradicting his early statement about the impact of low-education immigration on the wages of low-education native-born working, appeals to the fallacy of reductio ad Hitlerum, pairing popular complaints about immigration to the antisemitic blood libel. In the same paragraph wherein he admits to disagreement over the effect of low-skilled immigrants he next characterizes such concerns as “just sick fantasies being used to justify real atrocities.” He writes, “There is no immigration crisis; there is no crisis of immigrant crime. No, the real crisis is an upsurge in hatred.” (Maybe it is not a crisis for Krugman when immigration results in the transfer of $500 billion annually from the working class to the capitalist class. While I cannot take this up here, it should suffice to note that claims about the neutral impact of immigration of crime lump all immigrants together; a significant proportion of immigrants are from the Asian world, the least criminogenic cultures on the planet. And while there is an upsurge in hate in the United States, to an extent driven by right-wing rhetoric, the rhetoric works upon the ground of widespread frustration among the working class with US immigration policy.) 

The shift among progressives from defending the interests of native-born workers to advocating open borders and smearing those who dissent from the agenda has a lot to do with the psychological fallout over the election of Donald Trump, which has reframed the uncontroversial policies of the Obama Administration and redefined them as right wing and nativist. Remember when the left opposed war in Iraq when Bush was president, but fell silent as Obama bombed Libya and instigated civil war in Syria? Or #MeToo outrage over Donald Trump’s misogyny yet silence in the face of allegations of rape against Bill Clinton? The cause of the phenomenon—the pendulum swings from hysteria to equanimity to hysteria—is the mass psychological condition under the two-party political apparatus. The politically active do not focus their politics on class analysis and moral principle as much as on identity politics and virtue signaling these days. Whether something is wrong depends on the identity of the wrongdoer not the nature of the wrongdoing. This is what lies behind Krugman’s about face on immigration’s harmful impact.

Analysis of immigration requires seeing beyond the ideological subjectivity of emotionalism and partisanship. The facts are striking. There are approximately 43 million foreign-born people living in the United States: 21 million naturalized US citizens and 23 million noncitizens. Of the latter, approximately 13 million are permanent residents, 11 million are here illegally (although that number is likely higher), and two million hold temporary visas. The number of foreign-born persons in the US has more than quadrupled since 1965. In 1965, foreign-born persons represented 5 percent of the US population. By 2015, they comprised 13.5 percent of the population (this is not much below peak immigration in 1890, when the foreign-born population was around 15 percent of the total population). The desire to come to the United States is very great. In a June 2017 poll, Gallup found that as many as 37 million people in Latin America desire to relocate to the US permanently. One-third of all Hondurans express a desire to come live in the United States. In total, 150 million people—or 4% of the world’s adult population—would move to the U.S. if they could. If everyone who wanted to move to the U.S. had their way, the country’s total population would increase by almost 50%.

Significantly, the period of mass immigration 1890-1930 moved Americans to demand restrictions on the flow of immigrants, not so much out of nativism or racism (the immigrants were white Europeans), but because steam ships allowed for the mass introduction of low-skilled labor who were used by industrialists to suppress the wages of native workers. Mass immigration was behind marked deterioration of neighborhood conditions, with rising inequality, poverty, and crime. So is it really that surprising that the topic of immigration would return as a political topic when the numbers again approached that level? Yet the experiences of ordinary Americans are pitted against the multiculturalist attitudes and cocooned life of affluent Americas on the east and west coasts that accuse those who complain of the worst possible motives. Failing to see the left come to their defense, working Americans are seeking out new leaders and checking out different politics.

The pace of illegal immigration has been slowing. The Obama Administration was aggressive in controlling immigration and the Trump Administration has continued these policies—in the fact of tremendous resistance. The strategies used by Obama and Trump include tighter border controls, stepped-up deportations, and more frequent prosecutions for unlawful re-entry. The decline is also attributable to the economic crisis of 2007. At that point, the illegal proportion or the US population exceeded 12 million. Half of all illegal aliens in the United States are Mexicans, which is why the problem often gets defined as the problem of Mexican immigration, but here, too, the numbers are declining. From 1980 to 2014, the number of Mexican legal residents in the US grew faster than their illegal counterparts. However, numbers from Central America’s Northern Triangle, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras are growing, outpacing growth from elsewhereMore than illegal border crossings, immigrants who entered the United States legally (on nonimmigrant visas) are overstaying their visas. Illegal immigrants are overrepresented in the workforce, so they carry a disproportionate economic impact relative to the presence in the population. Many of those who are being deported are those who have overstayed their visas.

What about refugees? During the 1990s, most refugees were from the former Soviet Union and the Balkans. Most refugees today come from Syria, Afghanistan, Somalia, and Sudan. Most of the rest come from other African countries. Comparatively few refugees come from Central and South America, but given the proximity of the United States to the southern western hemisphere, we see more of them than do other countries. The number of those leaving the Northern Triangle, number in the tens of thousands. It is a very dangerous journey, especially for unaccompanied children, which comprise a large proportion of the total. They risk human trafficking and death from starvation, thirst, and exposure. Signaling open borders puts more of them in danger. Many of those claiming to be refugees cite criminal violence as the push factor. However, this, as well as the claim of domestic violence, have not been historically considered legitimate reasons to seek asylum. Such claims are hard to verify. Moreover, on principle, they do not align with the principle of asylum seeking. Criminal and domestic violence are rampant throughout much of the world. There is broad consensus internationally that these are legitimate claims: nationality (ethnicity), political opinion, race, and religion. Criminal violence that does not target members of groups on the basis of that association is considered interpersonal and does not confer refugee status.

Although it is worse in the US than elsewhere in the world in terms of the proportion of the population that is foreign-born, the problem of mass immigration is not unique to the US. Europe is experiencing a migrant crisis. There are crucial differences. In Sweden, for example, a country I have looked at closely, 80% of those who entered Sweden in 2015 were young men, whereas half of immigrants in the United States are women, a long-standing shift in gender representation. As in the US, most of those who cross the border or overstay their visas in European countries are not refugees or asylum seekers but economic migrants. As with many European countries, Sweden does not have housing and jobs for immigrants. The consequence of this is strain on the social supports Swedes (mothers, children, the elderly, the disabled) depend on, and a rise in crime and poverty. This is not only unfair to Swedes, but to the refugees and asylum seekers who need critical services, as well as to immigrants who are following the rules to legally enter the country (yes, persons who illegally enter a country harm the chances of those who are seeking to legally enter). 

I am in favor of following the international convention on refugees and asylum seekers. The Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, or the 1951 Refugee Convention (with amendments) defines who is a refugee, delineates the rights of persons granted asylum, as well as the responsibilities of nations that grant asylum. The Convention is rooted in Article 14 of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The 1967 protocol defines a refugee thus: “A person who, owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country; or who, not having a nationality and being outside the country of his former habitual residence as a result of such events, is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to return to it.” Crucially, refugees have substantial legal obligations in the Convention, principally, they must abide by the laws of the nation hosting them.

There is a basic truth in all this: if you don’t have borders, you don’t have a country. There is nothing immoral or oppressive or reactionary about drawing borders and defending them. Our foremost concern must be about justice. It is not fair to native-born workers to undermine their livelihoods and communities for the sake of capitalist profit. If we enforce immigration law, fewer people will come to the United States, and those who do will come via an orderly process and bring with them the knowledge and skills that will improve communities in the United States. The United States is not here to police the world or save the world, and it troubles me that those who support rational immigration policy are smeared as “nativists” and “racists.” The reality of enforcing the law is no reason for ignoring the law. Instead of demanding the abolition of ICE, the left should insist on due process and humanitarian treatment of those who cross the border or overstay their visas.

(Note: Readers may object that Borjas’ politics lean conservative. However, as The Miami Herald points out, while he supports increased restrictions on immigration, “he doesn’t believe a wall—built by Mexico or anyone else—does any good. He opposes the mass deportation of undocumented immigrants as inhumane. And he advocates a tax on businesses—high-tech, agricultural and all the rest—that profit from cheaper immigrant wages, and giving that money to Americans displaced by the immigrants.”) 

Censorious Desire

Offense taking is one of the motives behind a desire to censor opinions and images. There are people who find things people say offensive and want those who hurt their feelings held accountable and offensive opinions and images taken down.

A feminist, uncompromised by multiculturalism, criticizes the Muslim community for the expectation that women wear the hijab or the chador. According to the feminist standpoint, the hijab and the chador represent the modesty rules of a patriarchal religion designed to regulate sexuality on grounds that woman tempt men with their bodies and, seeing how each woman is meant for a particular man, women must be to some extent hidden (sometimes completely) from the male gaze. Feminists are correctly opposed to the notion that women should be subject to male control, so demand and expectation to cover are subject to criticism. An imam may describe the feminist attitude as “Islamophobic” and deem it offensive. In this case, what is offensive is criticism that challenges a system of sexual repression, and the desire to censor such criticism is motivated by a desire to perpetuate patriarchal arrangements.

I could provide many more examples, but it will suffice to note that expressions people find offensive are in theory infinite in number. In many of these cases, such as in the present case, the desire to censor is about protecting an unjust power – controlling what other people say and do because it challenges hierarchy and privilege. The underlying desire to prohibit speech critical of Islamic practice is a perceived need to prevent others from receiving ideas that may bring the legitimacy of that practice into question and, more broadly, shake their faith and undermine their traditions—which is what enlightenment is all about. The feminist challenges the patriarchy with her criticism. The claim that her words are offensive represent a tactic to silence her for the sake of the imam who believes others should not hear her words. This is no different than a desire to censor speech critical of white supremacy on the grounds that racists find such speech offensive.

The desire to control not only what people say, but also what others hear, to control what they think and believe, should compel each of us to become more fierce in our free speech advocacy. How could anybody who believes in freedom stand by silently while speech critical of oppressive practices is suppressed—or, worse, join with the offensive-takers and express their censorious desire? When people tell me that certain forms of speech should be restricted because they are offensive, I wonder when and how they acquired the authority to speak for other people. Who are they that they should control the thoughts and expressions of others or deny individuals the opportunity to hear the opinions of others or to receive their expressions? And who are you to stand idle while they attempt to do this? You invite your own oppression.

Restricting speech on the grounds that it may offend members of a group robs members of that group of the opportunity to hear speech they might find useful, enlightening, funny, liberating. Is speech critical of the Islamic prohibition on homosexuality offensive to homosexuals in Muslim communities? It doesn’t stand to reason that it would be. Might they find such speech useful in their struggle against stifling heterosexuality? Indeed, they might. As a supporter of gay rights, I have an obligation to stand with homosexuals everywhere. Who is your choice of comrades in that struggle? Gays and lesbians or Muslim clerics? Do all women in Muslim majority communities believe in Islamic modesty rules? Might there be women who do not want to wear the hijab but are scared or don’t know there is another opinion to hold on the matter? The latter is most certainly true. Might they welcome opinions that support their desire to exist uncovered or to at least have the conversation without being censored? I feel confident they do. And that is why I stand in solidarity with the victims of patriarchal oppression, not with the men who oppress them. Who is your choice of comrades in this struggle? Women or the imams? Are there no Muslims who find cartoons of Muhammad funny? I bet there are.

Why are the conservative and traditionalist voices of Islam allowed to set the terms of freedom for everybody? How could an atheist or a Christian ever accept being bound by the blasphemy rules of Islam? For that matter, why should a Muslim be bound by Islamic blasphemy rules? Would you tolerate this attitude coming from the Christians around you? I hope not. If an ideology doesn’t promote free thought, then of what use is it to a free people? I would have to think very lowly of people identified as Muslims to believe they were all incapable of seeing through the lies of their religion or that they were undeserving of the same rights I enjoy.

By falsely defending the sensibilities of a group which he assumes is monolithic in its sensibilities and for which he presumes to speak, the censor oppresses individuals by denying them access to information and knowledge. Censorship is not just about suppressing the speech or expression of the speaker or artist. It’s about withholding information and knowledge from people who need it or want it. They are not allowed to choose for themselves if the censor chooses for them. The censor claims to know the minds of other people and appoints himself defender of their interests. He robs people of their agency and their autonomy and their freedom by telling them that he and community leaders will think for them.

There is no human right that protects the desire to have one’s ideology held safe from criticism and ridicule or one’s harmful practices free of restriction. But there is a human right to be free to think and say what you will and to be free from harmful cultural and religious practices.

The censorious desire is the mark of the authoritarian mind. The human right to liberty is universal and unalienable.