Friend,
I wanted to make sure you saw this Op-Ed I wrote
for The Washington Post. Please read it and
consider sharing it.
Best, Ted
I served on active duty in
the U.S. Air Force and currently serve in the U.S. House of
Representatives. Yet I still experience people telling me to “go back”
to China or North Korea or Japan. Like many immigrants, I have learned
to brush off this racist insult. I never thought the president of the
United States would tell members of Congress to “go
back” to another country.
President Trump has often
crossed the line of what constitutes decent behavior. But this time
feels different, because he is now attacking legal immigration and
U.S. citizenship. His statements on Sunday and
since then imply that immigrants are somehow less
loyal to our country, less American, and that we should “go
back” or “leave” if we disagree with him.
Twenty years ago,
I wrote an
op-ed in The Post about what it was like to wear my
Air Force uniform while people questioned my loyalty to the United
States, all because of the color of my skin. I was in my Air Force
blues when a woman asked if I was in the Chinese air
force.
The suspicion that immigrants are not to be
trusted or are unpatriotic is not just wrong; it is un-American. And
dangerous. Yet it has marred America’s
past, including with the 19th-century “Yellow Peril”
hysteria, the internment during
World War II of more than 110,000 people who happened to be of
Japanese descent and accusations against Jewish Americans of
harboring dual
loyalties.
That brand of bigotry
was at the core of Trump’s online comments attacking the patriotism of
Democratic Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (N.Y.), Ilhan Omar (Minn.),
Ayanna Pressley (Mass.) and Rashida Tlaib (Mich.) — insults he continued
to defend on Tuesday.
To say I was furious when I read
Trump’s tweets would be an understatement. It brought me back to the
feelings I had when writing in 1999: about belonging, sacrifice and
what it means to be an American. Just as my Air Force uniform didn’t
protect me from racism then, the lapel pins worn by members of
Congress didn’t shield those four representatives from Trump’s hateful
venom. It didn’t matter that three of the women were actually born in
the United States or that Omar
immigrated from Somalia as a child.
The problem for the
president is that many Americans are immigrants or have friends or
family members who are immigrants. The American people continue to
support newcomers. A Gallup poll last year found that 75
percent of Americans believe immigration is good for the country.
The American people understand that what makes the nation great is not
people’s bloodlines or how long ago their ancestors arrived here, but
their character and belief in the Constitution.
A lot has
changed in 20 years since I wrote that Post op-ed. Americans elected
the nation’s first black president; there is a Hispanic American on
the Supreme Court; a woman is House speaker; a record
number of Asian Americans are in Congress;
and for the first time, Native
American women and Muslim
American women are serving in Congress.
“The United States
has more immigrants than any other country in the world,” according
to the Pew Research Center, and “the U.S. foreign-born population
reached a record 44.4 million in 2017.” The same report found that
immigrants and their descendants will drive 88 percent of the United
States’ population growth through 2065. The president cannot stop most
of this demographic change, especially without the consent of
Congress.
The United States represents hope, freedom and
opportunities to those who are born here and to those who are not.
Those values are part of the United States’ fabric. Diversity — both
in ideas and people — has always been one of the country’s greatest
assets.
Americans — white, black, Hispanic, Asian and Native
American — understand that we are better than the president’s
xenophobic message. Americans understand that rising drug prices, wage
stagnation and inadequate infrastructure affect everyone, regardless
of race. It is heartening to see the reaction to Trump’s remarks from
countless Americans who recognized that his words were repulsive.
Notwithstanding the current occupant of the Oval Office, the United
States is, and will remain, an exceptional nation.
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