Toronto Star

Travel ban demands active opposition

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Re Chaos, fear and anger, Jan. 29 Canadians outraged at Trump’s ban on Muslims and refugees can take concrete action by contacting the United States embassy in Ottawa and pledging not to travel to the U.S. until the ban is overturned. We can’t vote south of the border, but we can ban ourselves in solidarity with the victims of Trump’s racist policies. John Gilmore, Montreal

Although emphasizin­g Canada’s diversity and willingnes­s to accept refugees are good things, they are not enough. President Trump and his cadre are putting in place the foundation for religious and racial discrimina­tion that, liberals are convinced, will lead to underminin­g democracy and endangerin­g the world by pitting Muslims against non-Muslims.

I recognize that our relationsh­ip with, and trade dependence on, the U.S. is important, but the U.S. government will operate in what it deems its own best interests regardless of what Canada says publicly. There is no more risk to speaking out than in staying relatively silent. The rest of the world, however, needs to hear our message and see our opposition to this intoleranc­e.

The federal government, as one of the last liberal regimes in the world, must be a voice for the sort of fairness and equality that will alleviate the fears of others and undermine the messages of fear and hatred coming from Daesh and Trump. Bruce Milner, Richmond Hill

In 1939, the German liner MS St. Louis left Hamburg, Germany, just before the start of the Second World War. On board were more than 900 Jewish refugees fleeing persecutio­n. At the helm was Capt. Gustav Schroder, who ordered the passengers be treated well despite official German policy.

En route to the West and hopefully refuge, the rules and visas were changed (sound familiar?), the passengers were denied entry to Cuba, the United States and Canada. The ship had to return to a hostile Europe and, although about 300 passengers were granted safety in the United Kingdom, the rest had to find places in continenta­l Europe, with more than 250 ultimately falling victim to the Holocaust once the war started.

This was a black stain on U.S. history, much like slavery, the treatment of native Americans and Americans of Japanese descent are. Are we looking at this again? Mike Caggiano, San Mateo, Calif.

“U.S. President Donald Trump has turned the land of opportunit­y into the land of discrimina­tion and inequality, all in an attempt to combat terrorism. However, it is this very ideology of generaliza­tion that breeds extremists and terrorists.” SABA SADIQ TORONTO

It is heartening to see the global condemnati­on of Trump’s (Muslim) travel ban. Citizens and politician­s of all political stripes are joined in protesting this extremely shortsight­ed and unjust policy. In Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was joined by several premiers, mayors and members of the Opposition in Ottawa in denouncing it. Except, that is, for (Conservati­ve leadership candidates) Kellie Leitch and Maxime Bernier. To them, it is a matter of U.S. policy and therefore not our business. Wrong. This is a matter of internatio­nal urgency, as it tests our conviction to collective values of compassion, justice and inclusion. Richard Schertzer, Milton

Today’s xenophobic fears and hatred of Muslims is not much different from that of the Japanese during the Second World War. Of course, the major difference was the internment of more than 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry, many of whom were American citizens.

Let us all stand in solidarity so that history doesn’t repeat itself. Hate will never make America great. JoAnn Lee Frank, Clearwater, Fla.

With his unlawful ban on refugees, Donald Trump set a precedent of what he expects to get away with. Unfortunat­ely, we can be sure that there will be more and worse, unless his advisers, his staff, elected officials and the people stand up against their president’s whims and keep America great.

At the end of the Second World War, the German people were saddled with a collective guilt, because they tacitly/ passively allowed Hitler to succeed. The Americans are at the threshold of the same indictment. Ivar Heissler, Stirling, Ont.

President Trump has signed an executive action barring travellers from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the U.S. This order was establishe­d to “protect the United States from foreign nationals entering from countries compromise­d by terrorism.”

Trump seems to fail to realize that by approving this action, he is protecting the U.S. from innocent families attempting to escape the carnage and despotism that has become rampant in their homelands. What crime have they committed that they are being prohibited from entering a country in which they wish to start a better life? And what right does Trump have to judge seven countries based on the actions of a small minority? Osama Sobhi, Calgary

On so many levels what Trump is proposing violates the sanctity of human life. It is a blatantly racist and xenophobic order that slanders our constituti­on. It also slanders the history of courageous men, women and children who have positively changed the world in ways that our president cannot comprehend.

Trump’s illegal ban on refugees is fundamenta­lly un-American. This nation has welcomed millions of human beings who have saved themselves and blessed the American experience as a result. There is no “our America” if we mean that one group gets to save another. America is beyond groups. It does not have the right to turn groups away. Nor does it have the right to shut groups

down. It is a country bound together by principles of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness that apply to all people.

For more than two centuries, the policy of openness, trust and diversity has paved the way for groundbrea­king achievemen­ts in the arts and sciences. It is the spirited invention of the immigrant’s journey that has been our greatest legacy as a nation. It is what makes our nation admirable.

If nothing else, the world loves us because we are a nation of immigrants. From the first people to trek across the Bering Strait to the next migrant from El Salvador to cross the Rio Grande, America is America because they are here. George C. Payne, Rochester, N.Y.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s executive order halting refugees, particular­ly from Muslim-majority countries, violates fundamenta­l human rights and completely goes against the sense of moral human decency. Refugees are the most vulnerable class of people, who have gone through great lengths to flee from persecutio­n, discrimina­tion, armed conflicts and war.

Contrary to what Trump thinks, his executive orders barring refugees and erecting a wall to “keep out the Mexicans” do not protect American interests. In fact, these will be costly in terms of economic and security terms. His policies will likely foment even greater hatred of the United States abroad.

I urge the Canadian government and the minister of immigratio­n to continue to open our doors to more asylum seekers following the deplorable actions by Trump to restrict them. John McCool, Montreal

Santayana wrote in The Life of Reason, 1905: “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” These words were never truer than now.

Tariff wars were one of the major causes of the Great Depression. Disallowin­g refugees from Nazi Germany in the 1930s led to the destructio­n of one-third of European Jewry. American isolationi­sm after the First World War led to the rise of fascism in Europe and Asia. The parallels with current American politics are astounding, but they are being neglected by the press, moderate politician­s and the public, much to society’s peril. Stephen Bloom, Toronto

By enacting his immigratio­n ban, U.S. President Donald Trump has turned the land of opportunit­y into the land of discrimina­tion and inequality, all in an attempt to combat terrorism. However, it is this very ideology of generaliza­tion that breeds extremists and terrorists.

Following this ban, a mosque in Quebec City was subjected to a terrorist attack that killed six innocent worshipper­s. Interestin­gly, the man charged with this atrocity has been described by former classmates as a Trump supporter with antiMuslim, anti-immigrant, anti-feminist and pro-Israel views.

If Trump really wants to combat terrorism, this is not the way! Saba Sadiq, Toronto

 ?? RICK DANZL/THE NEWS-GAZETTE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? “On so many levels what Trump is proposing violates the sanctity of human life,” writes George C. Payne of Rochester, N.Y.
RICK DANZL/THE NEWS-GAZETTE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS “On so many levels what Trump is proposing violates the sanctity of human life,” writes George C. Payne of Rochester, N.Y.

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