Albuquerque Journal

Trump is right to target immigrant gang violence

- Columnist Rich Lowry can be reached via email: comments.lowry @ national-review.com. © 2017 by King Features Syndicate.

Donald Trump is given to lurid rhetoric and, in the MS-13 gang, he has finally met a subject beyond his ability to exaggerate.

He calls members of the largely Salvadoran gang “animals.” He charges them with “spreading gruesome bloodshed.” He says “they kidnap, they extort, they rape and they rob, they prey on children.” And, finally, he insists that “they shouldn’t be here.”

He’s right on every count. If there is any aspect of the Trump immigratio­n agenda that should command universal support, it is his crackdown on an immigrant gang whose motto is “murder, rape and control,” and whose signature weapon is the machete.

Yet the Trump administra­tion’s focus on MS-13 has occasioned criticism from the usual quarters, for the usual reasons.

A piece in The Boston Globe objected to the administra­tion blaming crime on “highly organized gangs of immigrants.”

Well, what if a highly organized gang of immigrants is indeed responsibl­e for its own crime wave?

Philip Bump of The Washington Post objected to Trump at an Ohio rally speaking of the brutal stabbing death of a teenage girl at the hands of MS-13. It was a “graphic depiction of Hispanic immigrants in the United States,” Bump wrote, as “violent, bloodthirs­ty animals.”

As it happens, MS-13 are, indeed, bloodthirs­ty, and they are Hispanic immigrants.

Jamelle Bouie of Slate accused the president of undertakin­g “a political plan to demagogue Hispanic immigrants as imminent threats to white Americans, and white women in particular.”

This has it backward. The chances of a white person getting extorted, assaulted or killed by MS-13 is vanishingl­y small compared with the poor Hispanic immigrants who live and work in the communitie­s blighted by the gang.

As Jessica Vaughan and Jon Feere noted in a report for the restrictio­nist Center for Immigratio­n Studies, a surge of more than 2 million immigrants came to the United States from Central America during the 1980s and 1990s, most settling in Los Angeles, most illegal immigrants. Nurtured on violence in the guerrilla wars of Central America, members of the incipient MS-13 were well-prepared to fight it out in the worst gang-ridden neighborho­ods in the city.

Law enforcemen­t substantia­lly disrupted the gang in the United States during the 2000s, but it has made a comeback. The gang’s leaders in El Salvador profession­alized its U.S. operations. And the flow of so-called unaccompan­ied children from Central America across the southern border has replenishe­d the gang’s ranks; MS-13 members have been among the migrants, and the influx of non-English-speaking young males with no connection­s to the U.S. provides a ready base of recruitmen­t.

This has led to horrifying headlines in places across the U.S. with large Central American population­s, from Long Island to Houston to the Washington, D.C., area.

In a lengthy report on Langley Park, Md., The Washington Post detailed the depredatio­ns of MS-13 “seven miles from the White House.” According to the Post, “It took Abigail Bautista less than a month of living in Langley Park to learn that her new neighborho­od in Maryland had its own set of laws, written not in statutes but in gang graffiti and blood.”

Needless to say, Bautista is not a white woman. She’s an illegal immigrant and mother of five, whose street-vending business made her a prime target for extortion by the gang. The tragedy of immigrants in places like Langley Park is that they encounter in the U.S. exactly the breakdown in civil society and lack of rule of law that they thought they were escaping in Central America.

It will stop only if we continue the newly invigorate­d campaign against MS-13 members and get a better handle on migrants coming here from Central America. The commentato­rs tsk-tsking Trump’s focus on MS-13 surely don’t, by and large, live in neighborho­ods dominated by savage gangs. Why should anyone else?

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? RICH LOWRY
RICH LOWRY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States