What is an American?
Is it defined by borders, treaties, laws and the Constitution or is it a nebulous set of mutable ideas and fluctuating standards? And who gets to decide? Is it as everchanging as this countryās boundary lines or was it set in stone by the cabal of white men who first conceived of this experiment in democracy?
Suggested Reading
What constitutes an American has always been a fickle concept. The original Constitution was silent on the issue and the first immigration law, the Naturalization Act of 1790 (pdf), extended citizenship status to āfree White persons of good character.ā The Thirteenth Amendment freed the slaves in 1865 but it wasnāt until three years later that the Fourteenth Amendment would grant citizenship to anyone born on U.S. soil (like Michigan Rep. Rashida Tlaib) and even the descendants of formerly enslaved persons such as Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.). In 1917, the Jones Act granted citizenship to everyone born in Puerto Rico after 1898, which includes the mother of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.). Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) became a citizen after her parents gained citizenship through the legally defined process, without any of the special exemptions received by people like Melania Trump.
Ocasio-Cortez, Omar, Pressley, and Tlaibās bona fides as Americans are not only defined by U.S. legal code, the Constitution, and history, but by their service to this country as duly elected representatives of their communities. However, to many people, including the president of the United States and his core group of acolytes, while these women are citizens, they are not American Americans. Because there is only one enduring and eternal truth about the definition of āAmericanā:
White people get to decide.
The Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798 gave government officials the power to deport citizens, disenfranchise immigrants and arrest those who āwrite, print, utter, or publish…any false, scandalous and malicious writingā against the government. In the mid-1800s, the Know-Nothing Party emerged from the conservative movement and tried to deport āradical leftistsā (pdf) who belonged to a certain religion. Politicians accused these citizens of being āvile imposters, liars, villains, and cowardly cutthroatsā who āhated America,ā according to Carleton Bealeās Brass Knuckles: The Great Know-Nothing Conspiracy. But instead of Islamophobia, it was Roman Catholicism. And when Donald Trumpās father Fred was arrested at a 1927 Ku Klux Klan rally, those second-wave Klansmen were seeking to eject Roman Catholics, the Italians and Irish, like the ancestors of Trump adviser Kellyanne Conwayāwho werenāt yet considered to be white. A Klan leader testified to the organizationās American ideals in a 1921 Congressional hearing:
[The Klan] stands for America first [emphasis added]āfirst in thought, first in affections, and first in the galaxy of nations.
If that sounds at all familiar, it is because the belief that America belongs to white people and white people only is embedded in the national consciousness. Anyone who is not a white, Anglo-Saxon Protestant can never truly be considered a real American, no matter what the Constitution or the law says because the ones who get to make that determination are endowed with one unmentioned, inalienable right:
White supremacy.
The idea of āsend her backā is the timeless and indestructible pillar upon which this country was built. It is a clarion call that allows the upholders of white supremacy to believe black and brown bodies are as returnable as defective Amazon packages. Forty-one of the 56 founding fathers were slave owners. During and after the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln proposed sending blacks ābackā to Haiti, Panama, Liberia and anywhere other than America. After World War I, whites initiated 38 anti-black riots during the āRed Summerā of 1919, in part because of black veterans returning to America with crazy ideas such as equality, owning guns and looking white people in the eye. In 1964, California Republicans barely blocked a proposal to include sending āNegroes back to Africaā on the stateās official party platform. Tea Party members and at least one Congressman were known for saying they wanted to send Obama āback to Kenya.ā
But despite his hatred for John McCain, Trump has never insinuated that McCain should be sent back to the Panama Canal Zone where he was born. When Trump fought with Mitt Romney, he made no mention that Romneyās parents and grandparents are from Mexico. In his attacks on ex-Republican Justin Amash, he did not cite Amashās Syrian and Palestinian heritage. Trump and his followers donāt think of Baron, Ivanka, Eric or Donald Trump Jr. as not Americans even though all four are the children of immigrants.
This is because Trump and his ilk believe that this country belongs to them and that everyone elseānon-whites, non-Christians and people who use more than a āpinch of saltāāare not the real Americans. Because of this, they have the authority to do to us what they will, including the right to lynch, segregate, disenfranchise, miseducate andāif they so chooseāto send us back.
And this is why they are also the most un-American of all.
Because, at the heart of their belief is their willingness to disregard the Constitution, the law, history and everything that they believe makes their country the greatest place on earth. They donāt truly believe all men are created equal, that Americans have freedom of religion or that there should be liberty and justice for all. To them, there is one thing more important than their country, their flag and the idea of America:
Whiteness.
But this is not new. It is as it has always been. There is no difference between the slave owners, the Confederates, the Know-Nothings, Klansmen, the segregationists, the Tea Partiers and the MAGAts. They are all white supremacists.
And that, dear reader, is the most American thing of all.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.