A Quick Comment on the history of American Xenophobia -- From Japan to Russia to Latinos
I’ve been very concerned about the hatred and negative rhetoric I’ve seen towards the Russian people on social media. We must not demonize citizens of a country for actions of their government. They, too, are victims of the Putin regime.
Russians have been subject to disinformation and coercion, not of their own making. For decades, activists have been murdered, disappeared, imprisoned, and banished from their own society. To be an ally of Russia is to plan and support for a post-Putin society.
We, of course, don’t know what that will look like, but one thing is for certain – hating Russians for the sake of being Russian is not the solution. We can and we must support those who wish to live in a free, democratic society. To demonize Russians makes us no better than Putin himself. As the invasion of Ukraine increased in 2021, this negative sentiment only grew against Russian citizens.
Of course, xenophobia is nothing new in the West. Post 9/11, attacks against Muslims were on the rise and tolerance for Islam was on the decline. The US DOJ Civil Rights Division site has a collection of some incidents of note.
Dating back further was the act of interning Japanese Americans during World War II, for the fact that they “might be” involved with the Japanese Imperial Air Force’s attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, which resulted in the interrogation and forced relocation of over 120,000 Japanese Americans to these ‘centers’. Many of these American citizens were second-generation Americans who had never set foot in their parents or grandparents' homeland of Japan, but fear of the Japanese resulted in the subjugation of their freedoms.
I would be remised if I did not include the most recent second and third order impacts of the American Latino population in the Age of Donald Trump. Forced relocation of those Americans of Latino decent who are perceived to be MS-13, a label often used by the American right, to blanket the ‘other’ who do not conform to the ‘standards’ of white, Anglo-Saxon, Christian citizens. Latinos are being uprooted from their lives and homes and forced relocated with force, as we’ve seen so many times before throughout United States history to El Salvador – a nation whose President is being compensated by the US government to hold these citizens without due-process.
History always repeats itself, albeit with different explanations. Thus, the American and the West’s historical context of internment, discrimination, and hate crimes have always been there, it seems to be a fever that we must but cannot break. Cultural integration has always been a crucial part of the United States, but our recent backward slide from democracy into authoritarianism is a backlash to the white populations becoming a minority.
Throughout all these incidents, America has always continued to somehow integrate and with any luck, our assimilation of cultures will continue should the citizens of the United States decide that this too - is an injustice to all that must be corrected.
A Quick Comment on the history of American Xenophobia -- From Japan to Russia to Latinos
I’ve been very concerned about the hatred and negative rhetoric I’ve seen towards the Russian people on social media. We must not demonize citizens of a country for actions of their government. They, too, are victims of the Putin regime.
Russians have been subject to disinformation and coercion, not of their own making. For decades, activists have been murdered, disappeared, imprisoned, and banished from their own society. To be an ally of Russia is to plan and support for a post-Putin society.
We, of course, don’t know what that will look like, but one thing is for certain – hating Russians for the sake of being Russian is not the solution. We can and we must support those who wish to live in a free, democratic society. To demonize Russians makes us no better than Putin himself. As the invasion of Ukraine increased in 2021, this negative sentiment only grew against Russian citizens.
Of course, xenophobia is nothing new in the West. Post 9/11, attacks against Muslims were on the rise and tolerance for Islam was on the decline. The US DOJ Civil Rights Division site has a collection of some incidents of note.
Dating back further was the act of interning Japanese Americans during World War II, for the fact that they “might be” involved with the Japanese Imperial Air Force’s attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, which resulted in the interrogation and forced relocation of over 120,000 Japanese Americans to these ‘centers’. Many of these American citizens were second-generation Americans who had never set foot in their parents or grandparents' homeland of Japan, but fear of the Japanese resulted in the subjugation of their freedoms.
I would be remised if I did not include the most recent second and third order impacts of the American Latino population in the Age of Donald Trump. Forced relocation of those Americans of Latino decent who are perceived to be MS-13, a label often used by the American right, to blanket the ‘other’ who do not conform to the ‘standards’ of white, Anglo-Saxon, Christian citizens. Latinos are being uprooted from their lives and homes and forced relocated with force, as we’ve seen so many times before throughout United States history to El Salvador – a nation whose President is being compensated by the US government to hold these citizens without due-process.
History always repeats itself, albeit with different explanations. Thus, the American and the West’s historical context of internment, discrimination, and hate crimes have always been there, it seems to be a fever that we must but cannot break. Cultural integration has always been a crucial part of the United States, but our recent backward slide from democracy into authoritarianism is a backlash to the white populations becoming a minority.
Throughout all these incidents, America has always continued to somehow integrate and with any luck, our assimilation of cultures will continue should the citizens of the United States decide that this too - is an injustice to all that must be corrected.