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Immigrants aren’t poison. They’re America’s lifeblood.

12 0
04.01.2024

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Our country does not have a singular bloodline to be poisoned. Americans can trace their roots to every corner of the planet. Even if your ancestors came here on the Mayflower, you’re descended from boat people, the riffraff of 17th-century Europe. They came here for the same reasons most immigrants come today: seeking a better life than what they faced in the place of their birth.

The reason we can make the audacious claim that we are an “exceptional” nation is because we are the first in human history not built on blood and soil, but on an idea: the idea of human freedom. Anyone (including Spartans) can become an American. Our mixed-breed heritage distinguishes us. “You can go to live in France, but you cannot become a Frenchman,” President Ronald Reagan once said, “You can go to live in Germany or Turkey or Japan, but you cannot become a German, a Turk or Japanese. But anyone, from any corner of the Earth, can come to live in America and become an American.”

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This is precisely why we need not fear the rise of nationalism in America. In most countries, nationalism is based on ethnicity. But ours is a creedal nationalism — a commitment to the supremacy of the American idea. European nationalism is inherently exclusive; American nationalism is inherently inclusive, open to those who come here legally and accept our creed, our Constitution and our founding principles.

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Today, our creedal nationalism is under assault from both the left and right. On the left, some are trying try to convince us that America is a systemically racist country that isn’t really all that great. On the right, some self-styled “national conservatives” are seeking to foist European-style blood-and-soil nationalism onto the American body politic. This is inimical to our founding principles. The Declaration of Independence says that “all men” — not all “Americans” or “U.S. citizens” — are created equal. Although we have sometimes failed to live up to those principles, when immigrants come here and jump into what we used to call the “great American melting pot,” they can become as American as any of us.

Fortunately, most Americans still believe this. According to a Gallup poll from July, a 68 percent supermajority says immigration is a good thing for the country (up from 52 percent in 2002). Just 27 percent of Americans consider it a bad thing.

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The problem at our southern border is not that so many people want to come here. It’s that many are coming here illegally. It’s that our government lets millions........

© Washington Post


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