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Saturday, January 11, 2020
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Comments (34)
American citizenship is eroding
By Victor Davis Hanson
Wayne and Marcia Buske Distinguished Fellow in History, Hillsdale College
Courtesy of Imprimis, a publication of Hillsdale College
https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/
Today, many condemn the idea of nationalism by connecting it to race hatred (e.g., white nationalism). But historically, the modern nation-state has proven uniquely suitable to preserving individual rights. The American nation in particular was successful in uniting individuals of different races, ethnic backgrounds and creeds into one people based on shared principles, a unique physical space, and a common national story. Our nation is the best example in human history of positive nationalism.
The key to this benign nationalism is American citizenship, based on an understanding of American exceptionalism and formed by the American melting pot. But today, our citizenship is eroding and, along with it, American nationalism in the positive sense is disappearing.
American citizenship is eroding in three ways.
First, we are blurring the line between mere residents and citizens. We have between 45-50 million non-native-born residents in the U.S. today—the largest absolute number we’ve ever had. There’s no legal problem with the 30 million of them who have green cards or have acquired citizenship—although even 30 million is a challenge for the American melting pot to assimilate and integrate.
But we also have, according to a recent Yale and MIT study, about 20 million people who are here illegally. In regard to them, the classical ingredients of American citizenship—the right to leave or enter the country as one pleases, for example, or to vote in elections, or to reside here as long as one pleases—are being blurred.
Where I live, in California, if you’re here illegally, you can de facto go back and forth across the border as you wish. In San Francisco, you can vote in some school board elections (the same is under consideration in some places in New England). And as we see with the DACA program, illegal residents can de facto live in the U.S. indefinitely.
Some policies even discriminate against citizens. An illegal resident in California who is charged with a crime is not subject to federal immigration law to the full extent, whereas a citizen who flies into Los Angeles from overseas without a passport will be detained. If you are in California as an illegal resident, you can obtain a driver’s license as citizens have in the past; whereas for citizens, starting next year, there will be an extra burden: to travel by commercial air, they will have to provide at least three sources of proof of citizenship to obtain a valid ID—given the apparent devaluation of the driver’s license.
People who come to the U.S. illegally and in great numbers usually do not have the degree of investment citizens do in our constitutional documents and are often unacquainted with our national story. Candidates from south of the border today fly into California’s Central Valley to campaign. Illegal residents vote in their home countries’ elections—and yet are unacquainted with political issues and candidates here in the U.S.
To avoid a fragmentation of society based on racial and ethnic chauvinism takes an extra effort to keep the melting pot working. We’re no longer making that effort. Indeed, we’re doing the opposite, encouraging diversity rather than unity.
Second, we’re becoming a country of tribes. The idea of multi-racialism—the notion that we’re of different races but we share a common culture—is eroding.
At many colleges and universities today, you can choose in advance the racial background of your roommate. Campuses have “safe spaces” that are reserved for people of particular races. There are dorms where students segregate according to race. Ethnic studies departments thrive by emphasizing racial exceptionalism.
Do we wonder why Elizabeth Warren chose to be a Native American, which, according to her own logic—the power of white privilege and systemic racism—would put her at a disadvantage? The answer is that she sought a careerist advantage. And Harvard was happy to comply: the law school bragged that she was its first “woman of color” faculty member.
I went to a grammar school that was about 90 percent Mexican-American. Some people who I went to first grade with later changed their names from Juan to John and dropped the accent on their last names. Now in their 60s, they’re changing back to Juan and adding back the accents. Why? Because there is now a disadvantage in identifying as an un-hyphenated American, and an advantage to belonging to a tribe. And the danger is that this logic of tribalism leads to the kind of social breakup and civil discord that we saw in Rwanda, the former Yugoslavia, and Iraq.
Third, the middle class, which had been encouraged and celebrated since the time of the American Founding, is now under sustained attack.
A solid, property-owning middle class anchors the nation. Traditionally, its members show the sobriety and judgment to achieve autonomy. They don’t look to government for help. They stand as a barrier against both property redistribution and crony capitalism.
Today, America’s middle class is threatened. Homeownership is down to about 62 percent from 71 percent just over ten years ago. The percentage of a family budget that goes to housing has risen from 20-30 percent in the 1950s to 30-40 percent today, especially in coastal corridors. Middle class wages, until an annual increase of three percent under President Trump, had been frozen for ten years. And we have an aggregate $1.6 trillion in student debt.
If the middle class continues to erode, we will become a nation of peasants and oligarchs. In California, more than one out of five people live below the poverty line—despite the fact that California has one of the highest number of zip codes of America’s most affluent people and the highest number of billionaires. If you drive through Palo Alto, you’ll see people living in RVs because they can’t afford to buy or rent a home—and these are people working for Google, Facebook, Yahoo, Oracle, and Apple, with a total market capitalization of nearly $4 trillion.
Additionally, we are seeing a formal assault on the Constitution by our elites.
Consider the nullification of federal law through the creation of sanctuary cities, in direct defiance of the immigration statutes. (Of course, such nullification seems to go only one way: otherwise, imagine how our elites would respond if the people of Provo, Utah, decided within their municipal jurisdiction to nullify federal handgun registration or the Endangered Species Act.)
Almost every single Democratic candidate for president is in favor of abolishing the Electoral College, which is in the Constitution to ensure equal representation to people living outside big cities, and to prevent the splintering of the electorate into several small parties.
There is also a growing academic attack on the mode of electing the U.S. Senate—“Why should North Dakota or Wyoming have the same number of U.S. Senators as New York?” progressives ask, in their eagerness to make U.S. Senators proportionally elected in the manner of House members.
This insidious assault on the Constitution results from the fact that popular elections haven’t been going the Left’s way, and the Left believes that its superior moral agenda justifies using any means necessary.
Ancient authors from Plato and Aristotle to Petronius and Tacitus have suggested that affluence combined with leisure paradoxically creates a laxity that leads to the kind of societal and institutional disintegration we are currently seeing. Another major ingredient of our current crisis is the failure of our education system to offer disinterested instruction, following from the post-1960s takeover by the Left of our colleges and universities.
In response, we need to support colleges that continue to teach the principles and practices of liberty. We must support policies that recognize the distinction between citizens and non-citizens and that bolster the middle class. And we need to defend the Constitution, our last great hope to ensure American continuity and security.
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VD Hanson should run for President in 2028! At least for senator! Imagine, no more Senior Senator from California!!
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
VietNam Vet, UCLA PhD, Ret. AF
4/24/2020 7:33:00 AM
We need to enforce our laws. How can you have a country if you don’t control. Why are non citizens allowed to vote?
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
Rolfe
1/19/2020 12:31:00 AM
Me. Sprecklemeyer - if what you say is true then please explain why after the Bush tax-cuts we went into the biggest recession since the Great Depression and since the Trump tax cuts we have the largest national debt in history. Republicans always say that tax cuts will pay for themselves and have the effect of reducing the debt through the growth in GDP yet it never actually happens. The rich get their tax cuts and we go further into debt. ••• Editor's note: "A fair tax system isn’t one that takes from the rich and gives to the poor. It’s one that requires everyone to play by the same set of rules. President Reagan understood that. Do we?" Thanks to Ed Feulner, founder of the Heritage Foundation (heritage.org).
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
Brad Adams
1/18/2020 3:06:00 PM
I would like to know what combat Veterans from Vietnam think about NVR's story about the library patrols at UC.
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
Matthew
1/18/2020 1:22:00 PM
All this talk about civil war is ridiculous. I lived and worked as a librarian at the University of Cincinnati. I lived through the racial problems in Cincinnati and the Vietnam War. One of my jobs at that time was to walk through the book stacks and make sure no fires had not been started. We were also prepared for fire bombs being thrown through the windows. None ever happened but it was turbulent times. Those of you promoting civil war are the dying gasp in a changing country.
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
NeverVoteRepublican
1/18/2020 12:20:00 PM
One need only know Hauser's Law ( F. Kurt Hauser) to realize the net effect of tax reduction, its' effect on driving up GDP to understand that it benefits the Government and the tax payer.
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
Robert J Sprekelmeyer
1/18/2020 10:56:00 AM
Funny is someone called "Never vote Republican" complaining about Trump tax cuts while ignoring the costs of Democrats proposals from Free college, free healthcare, free abortions, and green communist deal. Government can't afford what they give away now. I can't imagine what will happen if Democrats give away more. Venezuela and Atlas Shrugged comes to mind. But that just reaffirming what Doctor Hansen said. Left wing indoctrinated public education has created a generation of brain dead.
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
Terence Bell
1/18/2020 9:21:00 AM
Rick, Then I will look forward to your opposition to the Republican tax cut passed when Republicans controlled Congress and Trump was president. It added tremendously to the debt. This tax cut gave the top banks a $32 billion windfall. And all that promised help to workers never happened as corporations used the money to buy back stock. Then we pour billions in to defense that is not necessary, as we already spend more than the rest of the world. Also, the very wealthy got a great tax break also. But I don't expect much from you supporters of the president, who was notorious for screwing over the companies that worked for him. "Big companies drove Donald Trump’s tax cut law but refused to commit to any specific wage hikes for workers, despite repeated White House promises it would help employees, an investigation shows. The 2017 Tax and Jobs Act – the Trump administration’s one major piece of enacted legislation – did deliver the biggest corporate tax cut in US history, but ultimately workers benefited almost not at all. This is one of the conclusions of a six-month investigation into the process that led to the tax cut by the Center for Public Integrity, a not-for-profit news agency based in Washington DC. The full findings, based on interviews with three dozen key players and independent tax experts, and analysis of hundreds of pages of government documents."
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
NeverVoteRepublican
1/17/2020 2:23:00 PM
My experience with the mindset of the Born Again Socialists helps me understand why Athens condemned Socrates to death. Reread the Trial of Socrates.
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
Stephen A. Hill
1/16/2020 9:51:00 AM
NeverVote, 65% of the United States federal budget dollars are "Mandatory Spending." Look it up. THAT'S the primary reason that the Untied States' national debt is $23 TRILLION DOLLARS and growing at an exponential rate. That's a cool $70,000 of debt for every man, woman and child in this country. For a family of four, it's about $300,000. The average net worth of families in the United States is about $100,000. And once interest rates get back to an historical level of 6%, our national debt will explode vastly more than the already insane level that it is today. Not an insane level of debt? Well then, genius, how are you going to make up that debt that you owe that is THREE TIMES what you are worth? And will likely get to TEN times your net worth if we don't do something drastic to massively slash all that mandatory spending. Lefties think money magically money grows on trees and you just depend upon using other peoples' money. Right? Sounds like a totally hypocritical approach for all you folks on the Left who talk about respecting others and valuing individual differences. How about valuing people who bust their butts their whole lives to achieve a decent income and net worth, and not steal from them to support a bunch of trough-hugging leeches who are the primary reason for our national debt? You have no clue about anything in the real world. There is ONLY ONE way to reduce our national debt and stop its exponential rise, and it's to get back to the value that made America great: individual responsibility. And stop depending upon government and its massive deficits to support a huge portion of the American population who make irresponsible life decisions -- and then expect the rest of us to support them for the rest of their lives.
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
Rick Hampton
1/16/2020 1:57:00 AM
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