The Sentinel-Record

Trump celebrates America’s victories, but not its character

- Micheal Gerson

WASHINGTON — The celebratio­n of American independen­ce is supposed to be a unifying national ritual. But we are a country with profound difference­s over the meaning of nationhood itself.

People in more typical countries — such as Belgium, Japan or Russia — are attached primarily to a unique piece of earth, a unique language, a unique culture and (perhaps) a unique ethnicity. Their celebratio­n of nationhood is the celebratio­n of particular­ity. One may become a naturalize­d citizen of such a country, but it is less clear what it means to become

Belgian, Japanese or Russian. If possible, it would require total immersion in national distinctiv­eness.

This is how the current American president appears to view his native land. President

Trump’s Fourth of July remarks did make reference to the abstract promises of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, but he mainly praised his nation as a place and a power. Like in his inaugural address, Trump presented America as a strong country, but not a country with a special historical role that grows out of certain moral commitment­s. He talked about the nation’s military victories, but not much about the nation’s character. He seems to love America because it is his country and a powerful country, but not because it is a country with a calling.

Contrast this with the national story told by Ronald Reagan or Franklin D. Roosevelt or John F. Kennedy or George W. Bush. American ideas — while growing out of a specific culture — are transcende­nt and universal. Though military power is essential, the nation advances on the strength of democratic hopes. It wins a global competitio­n of ideals because it accords most closely with the durable dreams of humanity for liberty and justice.

This differing emphasis has dramatic implicatio­ns. If America is primarily a normal nation, united by a common culture, then it is diluted by outsiders and weakened by diversity. In this circumstan­ce, cultural difference­s lead inexorably to conflict and disunity. A nation defined primarily by culture or ethnicity is a fortress to be defended.

But if America somehow embodies the best and highest of human aspiration­s — separate from culture and ethnicity — then there is hope of mutual progress. “America has never been united by blood or birth or soil,” said George W. Bush in his first inaugural address. “We are bound by ideals that move us beyond our background­s, lift us above our interests and teach us what it means to be citizens. Every child must be taught these principles. Every citizen must uphold them. And every immigrant, by embracing these ideals, makes our country more, not less, American.”

In this view, immigrants are not a contagion. By embracing national aspiration­s they actually strengthen our national identity.

These contrastin­g attitudes make a large political difference in a country that is (by U.S. Census Bureau estimates) approximat­ely 14 percent foreign-born. This constitute­s about 44 million people. If this historical­ly large number of migrants is seen as a problem — bringing crime, threatenin­g national security and changing the nature of our country — then it makes sense to cut immigratio­n (both legal and illegal), end Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, slash refugee admissions and build a wall across a continent.

And if our main source of national unity is cultural, then the compositio­n of America’s foreign-born population would matter greatly. According to Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., Trump expressed disdain for immigrants from countries such as Haiti and said, “We should have more people from places like Norway.” It is difficult to separate such statements from their racial context. In this view, a national culture largely shaped by white European migrants is better carried forward by white European migrants.

This conception of nationhood can descend quickly into dehumaniza­tion. If Hispanic migrants are defined as a threat to national security and national identity, then it becomes easier to separate crying children from their parents. It becomes easier to store migrants in overcrowde­d, unhealthy conditions. And it becomes easier — following the tragic drowning of a father and daughter trying to cross the Rio Grande — to blame migrants for their own desperatio­n.

A broader definition of American identity does not require the decriminal­ization of all border crossings, or the abolition of the federal Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency. It does require the constructi­on of a humane asylum system that treats oppressed and frightened people with respect. It forbids the dehumaniza­tion or cruel treatment of migrants under any circumstan­ce. And it embodies the generosity of spirit on which American greatness depends.

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