Home WebMail Monday, November 4, 2024, 11:02 AM | Calgary | 0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
  • No news available at this time.
Posted: 2017-09-22T17:59:07Z | Updated: 2017-09-22T17:59:07Z Trump's Muslim Ban Is Racial ProfilingAnd We've Seen It Before | HuffPost

Trump's Muslim Ban Is Racial ProfilingAnd We've Seen It Before

Trump's Muslim Ban Is Racial ProfilingAnd We've Seen It Before
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.
Open Image Modal

#NoMuslimBan protester at Los Angeles International Airport, January 29, 2017.

Cindy Chu/Creative Commons

On October 10, the Supreme Court will hear two cases contesting President Trumps Executive Order 13780, which threatens to ban travel to the U.S. from six Muslim-majority countries and halt refugee admissions altogether. As the children of Gordon Hirabayashi , Fred Korematsu and Min Yasui point out in an amicus brief filed earlier this week , the governments defense follows a familiar patternpitting immigrants against real Americans, raising the specter of a national security crisis, and claiming the courts (and the rest of us peasants) have no right to second-guess such important presidential decisions.

That is some bullshitand not even some new, freshly squeezed bullshit. No, this is the same crusty old cowpie that racist, xenophobic politicians have been kicking around since this country was first founded stolen from Indigenous peoples.

Supporters of WWII incarceration had this to say in 1942: Sending 120,000 Japanese Americans to concentration camps may not be politically correct, but the urgency needed to address the Japanese problem overrides any minor inconvenience to these people, who wouldnt be complaining if they were loyal Americans . Contemporary supporters of racial profilingand make no mistake, thats exactly what this ismake basically the same argument: The Muslim Ban may not be politically correct, but the urgency need to address Islamic extremism overrides any minor inconvenience to these people, who have no right to complain because they arent even true Americans.

I have some words for these people.

First of all, Islamic extremism is not the problem here. Yes, there are terrorists claiming Islam who hate you and me and the imperialist, fascist state we call home. There are also terrorists claiming Christianity who hate you and me and the godless, genderfluid wasteland we call home. There are terrorists dropping bombs on Yemeni children in the name of American democracy, and terrorists counting on the apathy of you and me to keep protecting and serving murdering Black people.

Just like deception and fanaticism were not the exclusively Japanese traits that incarceration apologists made them out to be, violent extremism is not unique to the Muslim Worldwhich, by the way, is also a made up concept because Islam is global, yall .

The fact that law enforcement is perfectly capable of confronting white terrorism (also known as Caucasic extremism) without the aid of racial profiling should tell you everything you need to know about whats really behind the Ban.

Open Image Modal

Nothing to see here, just some gross anti-Japanese propaganda from beloved childrens author Dr. Seuss.

The selective internment of German and Italian Americans during World War II (versus the wholesale incarceration of Japanese American citizens and longtime residents) provides an interesting case study here. There were over 1.2 million German immigrants living in the United States in 1940 and another five million with German-born parents. The ethnic Italian population at the time was even bigger, as more than 2.4 million Italians immigrated to the United States between 1901 and 1920 alone. But because the government opted to judge these individuals as, well, individuals, the number of German and Italian American detainees topped out at about 14,500less than one-tenth of a percent of their total population.

Whats more, the FBI and Naval Intelligence were well aware, in 1941, that Japanese spies actively avoided using Japanese Americans as informants, focusing instead on recruiting whites who would be less likely to attract suspicion. Having conducted extensive (and not always legal) surveillance on Nikkei communities since the early 1930s, the military commanders and White House advisors who fought hardest for ousting the Japs during WWII knew full well that there was no evidence to support Executive Order 9066.

On the contrary, the multitudes of data amassed in the years leading up to Pearl Harbor exonerated Japanese Americans of any wrongdoing. But this information was never presented to the publicor the courts, for that matter. In an especially dystopian chapter of American history , the Solicitor General defending wartime restrictions on Japanese Americans before the Supreme Court in 1943 actually withheld evidence that contradicted the military necessity excuse. Then, as now, it was prejudice and paranoia, rather than established facts, that determined government policy.

The dog-whistle racism coded into the governments defense of the Muslim Banconcern trolling white feminists by tying Islam to gender-based violence , claiming everyone from this geographic region is dangerous because sometimes people who look like them do bad thingsis basically the Yellow Peril reincarnated. Asian immigrants arriving in the U.S. in the early twentieth century were met with the same political rhetoric and public outcry, painting them as an insidious and urgent threat to the American Way of Life (lol).

They refuse to learn English, people said. They have too many children. They dont belong here. Theyll take over if we dont root them out before its too late. This xenophobic ideology went largely unchallenged, and frequently translated into physical violence against Chinese, Japanese, Filipinx , Indian , and other Asian Americans. Trumps Islamophobic, anti-immigrant posturing has already created a similar surge in hate crimes, and continues to endanger Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, Arabs, South Asians, and other brown folks in America.

It was racism, plain and simple, that colored the immigration reform movement that brought us the Chinese Exclusion Act and the Asiatic Barred Zone and its racism, and not much else, behind todays Muslim Ban.

That alone should be reason enough to end it. But the governments attempts to defend the indefensible also obscure one monumentally inconvenient truth: the Ban actually does the exact opposite of what it claims . Not only does it add fuel to the dumpster fire of white nationalism that is the real terror threat , antagonizing Muslims reinforces the dangerous idea that the West is at war with Islamwhich helps ISIS recruit more angry, disenfranchised young men and creates more of the migration Trump & Co. are so concerned about. Executive Order 13780 is a far greater threat to national security than refugees fleeing a conflict zone.

Open Image Modal
The Bridge Initiative

Its important (and tiresome AF) to point out that none of this is new. Whether its rhetorical fearmongering, racist double standards, or leaning on outright lies when the facts dont back you up, weve been here before. Weve seen immigrants excluded from this country based on ugly stereotypes and unfounded fears. Weve seen families divided and degraded by cruel, overreaching executive actions. And weve seen what happens when that power goes unchecked.

Not this time. The constitution is there to protect usall of uswhen shit gets hard, not just when its convenient. Our civil liberties do not cease to exist because the president says so.

This time we must hold our leaders, and ourselves, accountable to the values we claim to uphold. This time we must be the allies we needed in 1942.

So raise your voice. Get loud, get active, get involved. Heed the lessons of Korematsu, Hirabayashi and Yasui by joining their childrens campaign to #StopRepeatingHistory . Stand up and show up for Muslims and refugees by declaring #NoMuslimBanEver .

...

Read more about the amicus brief filed by Karen Korematsu, Jay Hirabayashi and Holly Yasui here . Learn how you can get involved with their campaign at StopRepeatingHistory.org .

Learn how you can stand with those impacted by the Muslim Ban, and find an event near you at NoMuslimBanEver.com .

Your Support Has Never Been More Critical

Other news outlets have retreated behind paywalls. At HuffPost, we believe journalism should be free for everyone.

Would you help us provide essential information to our readers during this critical time? We can't do it without you.

Support HuffPost