The Mercury News Weekend

America’s Olympic champions come from many background­s

- By Ruben Navarrette Jr. Ruben Navarrette Jr. is a syndicated columnist.

SANDIEGO » If President Trump and the nativist wing of the GOP succeed in their suicide mission of cutting legal immigratio­n to the United States, who’s going to win all the Olympic medals?

Consider the heartwarmi­ng story of Chloe Kim, the 17-year- old snowboarde­r from Torrance, who won the gold medal in the women’s half-pipe this week at the Winter Olympics in PyeongChan­g. Kim racked up a near-perfect 98.75 on her last run.

Kim’s parents were born in South Korea and emigrated to the United States two decades ago. Imagine what went through their minds as their U.S.-born daughter hopped off her snowboard and wrapped herself in the Stars and Stripes.

“I’m so used to America,” Kim said recently. “But obviously I have a Korean face … I can’t walk around people like I’m, like, straight-up American; … I’m Korean American … I identify more with the American culture.”

Or reflect upon the inspiratio­nal tale of 24-year- old Mirai Nagasu, who leapt into the record books in the figure- skating team competitio­n when she became the first American in Olympic history to pull off a triple axel jump. She told reporters, “I wanted to make America proud.”

The U.S.-born daughter of immigrants from Japan, who run a sushi res- taurant in Southern California, Nagasu was for a time a dual citizen of Japan and the United States. But Japanese law required that she choose one or the other before her 22nd birthday. She chose U.S. citizenshi­p.

Are these the people we’re supposed to be afraid of — legal immigrants like the parents of these two Olympians?

Trump, White House adviser Stephen Miller, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and Republican Sens. Tom Cotton and David Perdue think the American Dream is a zero-sum game. They yammer on about ending what they derisively call “chain migration” and argue for a point system that rewards “merit.”

Though this may come as news to people like Trump, Miller, Sessions, Cotton and Perdue, merit doesn’t mean being born on third base and prancing around like you hit a triple. Merit doesn’t mean having white skin.

As the grandson of a legal immigrant from Mexico, I’d say merit is something along the lines of a monster work ethic, passion, optimism, determinat­ion, perseveran­ce, fresh thinking and the unquenchab­le desire to be the best at whatever you do.

The private sector gets it. A poignant 60-second commercial about the heritage of Olympic athletes deserves its own gold medal. The spot — for the online genealogy site ancestry.com — recalls the 1980 upset victory of the U.S. hockey team over the Russians in Lake Placid, New York. As it points out, the American players came from all sorts of ethnic background­s.

At a time when Americans have been infected by their leaders with the absurd idea that immigrants are ruining this land of immigrants, the commercial — titled “America’s Greatness Comes from Everywhere” — is a dose of penicillin.

Are we blind? The U.S. team at the Winter Olympics looks like a miniature United Nations. It’s the genius of America that it takes in throwaways and runaways from what Trump calls “s—thole countries” and turns their offspring into the pride of the world.

You can see them honored in the days to come during the medal ceremonies in PyeongChan­g. You can’t miss them. They’ll be all decked out in red, white and blue.

Though this may come as news to someone like President Trump, merit doesn’t mean being born on third base and prancing around like you hit a triple. Merit doesn’t mean having white skin.

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