Progressive
Nationalism and the Latino Presence
Some of you may have read my
article entitled “Racial Contestation and the Emergence of Populist Nationalism
in the United States,” which was attached to my last blog post. I argued that after decades of political
polarization, America has become two nations, not one. And I offered a typology
with the features of the two identities. Here I want to take up two of the
elements in the typology: “character of nationalism” and “racial ideology.” And
I want to relate them to the question of Latino, and especially Mexican
presence in our midst.
I said that populism on the right, or American
traditionalism, embodies a parochial, narrow-minded view of who constitutes the
nation. The racial ideology for that nationalism is white assimilationism: the
notion that people of other races or nationalities who come here must
assimilate to the values and beliefs of white settlers who founded this
country. Conversely, the populism of the left, American progressivism, advances
rooted cosmopolitanism: the acceptance of peoples and cultures from all over
the world, but within a “firm sense of American identity and allegiance.” I wrote that progressive racial
ideology is multiculturalism (or perhaps, multiracialism). This is the belief
that non-white races have had different historical experiences than the white
majority; and that a new value system embodying all of those narratives should
be advanced. One might say that traditional nationalism is exclusive in two
ways. It requires that those who come to the country after the founding era
assimilate to the Anglo-Saxon culture they find upon arrival. But also, those
who are concerned that what is good about America cannot be sustained if whites
become a minority can be found in the traditionalist camp. I’m talking here
about people like Charles Murray (Coming Apart) and Patrick Buchanan (Suicide of a Superpower).
Progressivism is inclusive. It
upholds the idea that America is a nation of immigrants, and that injections of
successive waves of immigrants has brought vitality and innovation to the
America experience. Progressives are not concerned that since the 1960s the
vast majority of immigrants have come from the brown parts of the world, and
are fueling the browning of America that we are witnessing. Whether it’s
software geeks in Silicon Valley, or those working in sweat shops, or the
fields, immigrant drive and creativity are quintessentially American and should
be welcomed.
These broader dimensions to the
discussion of immigration must wait (hopefully) for another post, but here let
me focus on immigration from south of the border. Progressive multiculturalism,
most eloquently proffered by Ronald
Takaki in A Different Mirror, spins a
narrative anchored in five racial groups: Native, European, African, Mexican
and East Asian Americans. He weaves a powerful narrative unpacking the original
contradiction between what was already a multiracial socioeconomic system and a
white supremacist political order. He shows how European immigrants and people
of color embraced the American creed, and through struggle, compelled the
nation to incorporate them.
Those five racial/cultural
elements of American society, however, have two powerful poles: the white
people who founded the country and have dominated it historically, and the
Latino, but primarily Mexican population who’s “homeland” is next door. If you
read the chapter in Takaki about the decades in the Southwest after the Mexican
War, you find that Mexican labor was absolutely essential to the building of a
viable economy in the region. Mexicans worked in the mines, the fields and on
the railroads. They even taught white boys how to be cowboys! Another good read
is Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz’s An Indigenous
Peoples’ History of the United States. She chronicles the way in which the
American West was politically, economically and culturally integrated to those
lands south of the so-called border before the Spanish conquest. Throw in the
other non-Spanish speaking indigenous people around the region, and the Chinese
and Japanese on the West coast, and you begin to see that the West has also,
always been multicultural.
Another enduring, though not
particularly sexy American value is pragmatism. That is, simply doing what is
effective and works! The pragmatic
position on immigration is what progressives are advancing. It’s cosmopolitan,
humanistic, and it also is what has always worked. A 2015 Pew Charitable Trust
poll found that “(72%) of Americans – including 80%
of Democrats, 76% of independents and 56% of Republicans – say undocumented
immigrants currently living in the U.S. should be allowed to stay in the
country legally if they meet certain requirements.” But 45% believe increasing deportations would be
a good thing, and an equal share believe it would be bad.
So there’s pragmatism in public opinion. If people have been here
working and not breaking the law, most Americans think they should at least be able
to gain legal residency. But there is also ambivalence at the aggregate level
around the extent of deportation. But the acerbic tone of the Trump presidency
has stoked fears, and with both houses of Congress in Republican hands, the
immediate future hangs in the balance. Another interesting read in this respect
is George Friedman’s The Next 100 Years.
It’s mostly about global affairs and great power competition. But in the final
chapter Friedman spins out a scenario in which the southwest quadrant of the
country is dominated by Mexicans culturally and demographically. He outlines a
chain of events in which the US Army is patrolling the border, Mexican-American
governors are refusing to call up the National Guard to support the army, protests
are rampant in the streets, and a Mexican-American bloc in Congress is
vociferously opposing such policies. Friedman predicts that will happen in the
last quarter of this century. And he leaves the door open as to how that crisis
might be resolved.
But with Herr Trump in the White House, events may speed up
dramatically. So especially, to my white American comrades, are you ready to
defend the multicultural/ multiracial nation, if necessary with heart, soul
(and blood!)? Are you ready to make the arguments around rooted cosmopolitanism
and good old American pragmatism to your white family members and friends?
People of color can be of assistance here, but what we are witnessing is a
battle for the soul of white America … Which way are yall gonna roll?
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