I don't mean to say there aren't efforts to do so. But we need more. Too many folks on one side aren't familiar enough with the parallel struggles on the other side. As lawyers who serve both, we see the genesis and execution of these policies up close and personal.
We need to see these policies as starting from a place of hate, and understand the "evil genius" process that goes into engineering these policies for maximum impact. Time spent identifying these parallels - whether between Latinos and Muslims, or any number of other communities - has a unifying effect on otherwise disparate channels of resistance.
We need visible examples of the commonality of the struggle for rights between groups. Actually, we need to make the examples visible.
Muslims |
Commonality |
Latinos |
A way to target people based on being a member of a certain class (forced registration or coaxed registration) |
||
A way to delay/deny immigration benefits when there is no evidence of wrongdoing |
Known gang member, criminal alien |
|
Syrian Refugees |
Maligned and mistrusted; political punching bags; sometimes rolled into super Latino-Muslim bogeyman |
Northern Triangle Asylum Seekers |
DACAmented and TPS holders are in both our communities (TPS countries: El Salvador, Honduras, Syria, Yemen, Somalia) |
||
A trigger of the deportation machine |
||
Create deportation land mines in everyday unavoidable aspects of life |
Workplace raids |
|
A well-funded industry to dehumanize and create fear |
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Heightened scrutiny, less favorable discretion |
Procedural roadblocking; less due process |
High denial rates, denial of due process |
Laws based on misinformation and fear |
But if we assume the White House is a "unitary actor" then much of the rest of the population are highly fragmented multiple actors. That's less "diversity" and more " disorder" - lacking a common vision, and hence unable to focus. Certain segments are called out, perhaps, more than others (or at least each group is made to feel like they are being called out more than others.) Muslims complain of Islamophobia, Latinos about anti-immigrant sentiment, Jews anti-Semitism, etc. etc. Everyone in their own tidy category.
Believing you have it worse than others inhibits collaboration and communication. Whispers that "it might not be so bad" if you just "give him a chance" similarly inhibit collaboration. Inter-immigrant bigotry, racism, and misogyny also inhibit collaboration.
The fact remains, it's hard to unify disparate classes. People do feel more comfortable with people like them. But rallying around "not Trump" will take you nowhere - you can't expect your GPS to navigate if you put in a place you don't want to go.
So to everyone on the ground, my colleagues who were at the airports, the folks tirelessly working with elected officials to protect due process, the folks at high-level meetings, the rally organizers, the marchers: please take a moment to remember that while another community's fight might seem different to you, it's usually not.