ed note–As we have repeatedly said here, although this is not the particular ax we grind on a daily basis on this website, nevertheless there are laws on the books dealing with immigration and are there for good reasons. Like the front door to your house that has a lock on it and which is used in providing both privacy and protection from thieves and others out to do you harm, likewise a country has the right to say ‘yea or nay’ to certain persons wanting to enter.
Having said all that, please keep in mind a few things here–
If Trump were to do the exact opposite and maintain the lax security protocols with regards to IMMMEEEGRAAAYSHUN that has typified past administrations, the #NeverTrumpers who today are making spectacles of themselves protesting current immigration protocols would then be pissing and moaning that Trump is not doing his job and is an ‘appeaser of terrorism’. Furthermore, please note that all these Jews and the various anti-Trump organizations they represent are not carrying out any protests against Israel’s immeeegrayshun policies with regards to the Palestinians, many of whom are not ‘political’ at all, but merely need medical care and other services but who nevertheless are stopped dead in their tracks, sometimes literally as a result of some drug-driven IDF terrorist who shoots them dead at the border.
Now, why is that, we wonder?
Peter Beinart for the Jewish Daily Forward
There are many reasons for American Jews to reject Donald Trump’s inhuman treatment of the undocumented families who cross America’s borders. The Torah emphasizes the value of all people. (It doesn’t begin with Jews. It begins with Adam, Eve, Cain, Abel and Noah, who hail from no nation or tribe). The Torah repeatedly stresses our responsibility to the stranger. And, in modern times, Jews have often needed the very refuge that Central American migrants seek today.
But there’s another reason to oppose Trump’s savage nativism: It verges on idolatry. Let me explain.
In their wonderful podcast on Jewish law, Responsa Radio, Rabbis Avi Killip and Ethan Tucker of Yeshivat Hadar recently took up a question from a Jewish martial arts student who asked whether she could ceremonially bow at the end of class. From the perspective of Jewish law, Killip and Tucker explained, the key issue is what one is bowing too. You can bow as a sign of respect. In the Bible, Jacob bows to his brother Esau, Moses bows to his father-in-law Jethro, the Prophet Nathan bows to King David. What you cannot do is bow, even inadvertently, to something that is worshipped. The Talmud, they note, instructs that if you accidentally drop coins in front of an idol you should not bend down to pick them up lest you appear to be worshipping it.
This distinction might explain Mordechai’s famous refusal to bow to Haman in the Book of Esther. Why was it OK for Nathan to bow to King David but not OK for Mordechai to bow to Haman? There are many opinions. But one might be that Haman, unlike David, was fashioning himself as some sort of god.
What does this have to do with Trump and immigration? The answer lies in the way Trump depicts the American nation. He’s turning it from an object of respect into an object of worship.
Nationalism has been an animating feature of the conservative movement since its birth in the 1950s. But before Trump, the American right’s reverence for the American nation was tempered by a reverence for principles that transcended it.
One principle was capitalism. With a few exceptions, like Pat Buchanan, prominent American conservatives supported free trade even though globalization made borders more porous. Trade barriers strengthened American sovereignty, but most conservatives saw them as an offense not only against prosperity but against freedom.
The second principle that tempered the nationalism of the American right was religion. Although American Christianity often went hand in hand with American nationalism, its moral universalism sometimes restrained it. George W. Bush’s missionary zeal may have contributed to his decision to invade Iraq. But it also led him to increase funding to combat AIDS in Africa. When Bush said, in a 2006 speech on immigration that, “Every human being has dignity and value no matter what their citizenship papers say,” he was speaking not as an American nationalist but as a Christian universalist.
Trump has weakened these countervailing forces. He scorns the global capitalist system that leading conservatives once admired. He sees America’s relationship with other nations in largely competitive, zero-sum terms. He rejects virtually any moral obligation to people in other lands. And he refers to migrants seeking to enter the United States not as children of God but as “animals” who “infect” the American nation.
Trump is turning America into a kind of idol. He declared his inauguration day a day of “patriotic devotion” a word historically associated with religious piety. He announced in his inaugural address that, “At the bedrock of our politics will be a total allegiance to the United States of America.” Not just allegiance, but “total allegiance.”
When presidents have used such totalizing, hyper-nationalist language in the past, it has usually augured brutality and exclusion. The last president to declare a day of “patriotic devotion” was Woodrow Wilson at the beginning of World War I. He declared it at the same time the revived Klu Klux Klan was demanding “one hundred percent Americanism.” And World War I ushered in an era of nativist hysteria in which the Justice Department raided immigrant neighborhoods looking for radicals, towns outlawed the playing of Beethoven because he was German and vigilantes lynched German Americans in the streets.
Trump’s hyper nationalism has brought its own forms of ugliness. He has demanded that NFL owners fire players who don’t salute the flag. He has said a Mexican-American judge born in Indiana should be disqualified from hearing a lawsuit against Trump University because he’s “Mexican.” And, like Wilson, he has endorsed brutal measures against immigrants who supposedly sully the integrity of the American nation.
Nationalism, as Batya Ungar-Sargon has powerfully argued, can be a force for moral progress when linked to inclusive liberal ideals. But in Trump’s hands, it has become a heresy.
When a president suggests that Americans owe a special obligation to each other, he is making Americanism an object of respect. When Trump suggests that non-Americans constitute a different species, he is making Americanism a kind of deity. He is asking Americans to abandon instincts that make us human—our empathy for a vulnerable, terrified immigrant child—to prove our “total allegiance” to our nation.
This violates something deep in Jewish tradition, which commands Jews to be loyal to the countries in which we live, not to treat them as gods. The more Trump invokes Americanism to justify inhumanity, the more American Jews should refuse to bow down.
One thought on “How They Do It–'Trump is turning American nationalism into an idol and we Jews should sense the danger'”
Great example of Jewspeak Peter Beinart Jew. What does a Jew call a Palestinian that wants freedom in their own land? – A: Dead on Arrival. Jewspeak is fading fast under Trump, as will Judea, Inc. when the can of joojoobeans fully spills on the floor. It’s coming – Watch for it.
Great example of Jewspeak Peter Beinart Jew. What does a Jew call a Palestinian that wants freedom in their own land? – A: Dead on Arrival. Jewspeak is fading fast under Trump, as will Judea, Inc. when the can of joojoobeans fully spills on the floor. It’s coming – Watch for it.