Sunday, September 5, 2010

America’s History of Fear


Nicholas D. Kristof
September 4, 2010
The New York Times

A radio interviewer asked me the other day if I thought bigotry was the only reason why someone might oppose the Islamic center in Lower Manhattan. No, I don’t. Most of the opponents aren’t bigots but well-meaning worriers — and during earlier waves of intolerance in American history, it was just the same.

Screeds against Catholics from the 19th century sounded just like the invective today against the Not-at-Ground-Zero Mosque. The starting point isn’t hatred but fear: an alarm among patriots that newcomers don’t share their values, don’t believe in democracy, and may harm innocent Americans.

Followers of these movements against Irish, Germans, Italians, Chinese and other immigrants were mostly decent, well-meaning people trying to protect their country. But they were manipulated by demagogues playing upon their fears — the 19th- and 20th-century equivalents of Glenn Beck.

Most Americans stayed on the sidelines during these spasms of bigotry, and only a small number of hoodlums killed or tormented Catholics, Mormons or others. But the assaults were possible because so many middle-of-the-road Americans were ambivalent.

Suspicion of outsiders, of people who behave or worship differently, may be an ingrained element of the human condition, a survival instinct from our cave-man days. But we should also recognize that historically this distrust has led us to burn witches, intern Japanese-Americans, and turn away Jewish refugees from the Holocaust.

Perhaps the closest parallel to today’s hysteria about Islam is the 19th-century fear spread by the Know Nothing movement about “the Catholic menace.” One book warned that Catholicism was “the primary source” of all of America’s misfortunes, and there were whispering campaigns that presidents including Martin Van Buren and William McKinley were secretly working with the pope. Does that sound familiar?

Critics warned that the pope was plotting to snatch the Mississippi Valley and secretly conspiring to overthrow American democracy. “Rome looks with wistful eye to domination of this broad land, a magnificent seat for a sovereign pontiff,” one writer cautioned.

Historically, unreal suspicions were sometimes rooted in genuine and significant differences. Many new Catholic immigrants lacked experience in democracy. Mormons were engaged in polygamy. And today some extremist Muslims do plot to blow up planes, and Islam has real problems to work out about the rights of women. The pattern has been for demagogues to take real abuses and exaggerate them, portraying, for example, the most venal wing of the Catholic Church as representative of all Catholicism — just as fundamentalist Wahabis today are caricatured as more representative of Islam than the incomparably more numerous moderate Muslims of Indonesia (who have elected a woman as president before Americans have).

In the 19th century, fears were stoked by books written by people who supposedly had “escaped” Catholicism. These books luridly recounted orgies between priests and nuns, girls kidnapped and held in secret dungeons, and networks of tunnels at convents to allow priests to rape nuns. One woman claiming to have been a priest’s sex slave wrote a “memoir” asserting that Catholics killed boys and ground them into sausage for sale.

These kinds of stories inflamed a mob of patriots in 1834 to attack an Ursuline convent outside Boston and burn it down.

Similar suspicions have targeted just about every other kind of immigrant. During World War I, rumors spread that German-Americans were poisoning food, and Theodore Roosevelt warned that “Germanized socialists” were “more mischievous than bubonic plague.”

Anti-Semitic screeds regularly warned that Jews were plotting to destroy the United States in one way or another. A 1940 survey found that 17 percent of Americans considered Jews to be a “menace to America.”

Chinese in America were denounced, persecuted and lynched, while the head of a United States government commission publicly urged in 1945 "the extermination of the Japanese in toto." Most shamefully, anti-Asian racism led to the internment of 110,000 Japanese-Americans during World War II.

All that is part of America’s heritage, and typically as each group has assimilated, it has participated in the torment of newer arrivals — as in Father Charles Coughlin’s ferociously anti-Semitic radio broadcasts in the 1930s. Today’s recrudescence is the lies about President Obama’s faith, and the fear-mongering about the proposed Islamic center.

But we have a more glorious tradition intertwined in American history as well, one of tolerance, amity and religious freedom. Each time, this has ultimately prevailed over the Know Nothing impulse.

Americans have called on moderates in Muslim countries to speak out against extremists, to stand up for the tolerance they say they believe in. We should all have the guts do the same at home.

4 comments:

  1. Kristof's post describing "worriers" and "intolerance" covers essentially the same territory as earlier material in other posts on this site on "conspiracy-theories". Kristof would have us believe that "there is nothing to fear except fear itself".

    Kristof'd meanderings over various "waves" of immigration are the most dangerous anaesthesia around - putting the White Western World to sleep so that Left-Libralism may administer death by slow-acting lethal injection.

    Where this "lethal injection" is calculated, criminal, reckless negligence in the administration of what is now the INS for at least the preceding 140 years, if not longer.

    Had America been kept the way the designers of America in 1776 intended, and had what is now the INS done its duty for at least the last 140 years, America would be a far better place today.

    Its population would be 150 million lower - with less stress on and in its cities, it would never have had any debt - either domestic or foreign, it would have never had to go off the gold and silver standard, it would never have had to resort to deficit budgeting, the agency of US AID would never have been born, FDR's New Deal would never have happened, its personal tax would have been 75% lower, we would never have seen the recent global financial crisis triggered by a racially-targetted Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae banking criminality started by Clinton in 1999, and its surplus in 2010 would be over $250 trillion;

    Its crime would be less than 5% of what it is today, it would be far more socially homogenous with the beneficial social cohesion that comes with cultural and demographic homogeneity - without the evil of the Tower-of-Babel-inspired cultural diversity present today, its livestyle would be far more Biblical;

    And finally there would be no internal challenge to its support for Israel under the rubrics of Gen 2:2,3 and Christ's re-presentation of this in Matt 25 and the "inasmuch as ye have done it . . (or done it not) to the least of these my blood-brothers (the Jews), ye have done it to Me.

    Each "wave" described by Kristof has done at least some damage to the America of 1776 - much of it in the faith sector.

    America has lost much due to the negligence of the INS. Only as America brutally rejects the anaesthesia of Kristol and does the precise opposite will America have any hope of survival.

    In the absence of any Biblical prophet to condemn the Kristol rubbish, Glen Beck is filling this vacuum. Only a Sarah Palin presidency - in alliance with the new Tea Party(and, God-help-us, not the evil Hillary Clinton one) will save America from oblivion.

    Inasmuch as committed Christians prayed for the downfall of the Soviet bloc during the 20th century, it is now time for these same Christians to pray for (and work towards) the downfall of the same Soviet-Liberalism gnawing away at America today. And make America great once more.
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  2. Your absence of stating facts reflects the absence of your logic, Anamchara. This is nothing but speculation and ideology here.
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  3. Dear John,

    Thanks for this. Perhaps you might like to see some facts that space on your site curtails in one post:

    Catholics:
    1. In a pre Vatican II environment, ultramontane Catholicism was indeed a threat to the America of 1776 - they only had to look at the 1588 Spanish Armada against Britain as well
    as the various “Popish plots” in London in the 16th century against a protestant Monarch and
    Parliament for that - refer to the Gunpowder Plot whose defeat was celebrated until recently
    as Guy Fawkes night in British Countries. Fr. Coughlin’s ultramontanism was proof positive
    of that.
    2. Catholic inexperience in democracy was a direct consequence of the evil Pagan Roman
    administrative structure being imposed on the Imperial Roman Church from Constantine
    down - a top-down Autokrator structure with no room for the Pauline Charisms of the Spirit
    operated by the laity, independent of and where necessary in defiance of the clergy.
    3. Suspicion of Catholic sexuality peccadilloes were fired by Rome’s total lack of Biblical
    support for any form or clerical celibacy - one form of sexual perversion leads to others -
    witness the current crisis over Catholic clergy pedophilia.

    Germans:
    The Germans supplied three great dangers not only to America but to the world:
    1. Marxism - concocted by the Germans Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.
    2. Hohenzollern Imperialism turbocharged by Prussian Militarism - climaxed in Kaiser
    Willhelm in the first World War.
    3. Fascist Nazis - a largely German Catholic movement.

    Jews:
    Not initially Religious or Racial in the pure sense of the word.
    1. Most Yiddishkeit Jews from eastern Europe were looked down upon not only by Gentile
    Americans but by their highly-assimilated fellow Jews in both America and Britain for their backward “peasant” culture - something that America never really had.
    2. No Free Enterprise American wanted Jewish Bundism - the Jewish form of socialism.

    Chinese:
    Ever since the Gold Rushes in the English-speaking world (1849ff) in USA, Canada,
    Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, there was righteous suspicion of the “Asiatics”. The
    non-Asian “coal-face” prospector knew full well that the Government authorities were never
    told the full amount the Chinese actually found.
    Besides, no historian has been able to intelligently or honestly explain the financing of the Boxer rebellion in China at the turn of the century apart from gold-theft from the English-speaking world.

    Japanese:
    Japanese Hirohito Imperialism was worse than anything continental Europe could come up
    with. The Japanese Bushido code was eerily similar to the Islamic Arab “shahid” code.

    - do you want more?
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Sisoes, the great ascetic, before the tomb of Alexander, King of the Greeks, who was once covered in glory. Astonished, he mourns for the vicissitudes of time and the transience of glory, and tearfully declaims thus: "The mere sight of you, tomb, dismays me and causes my heart to shed tears, as I contemplate the debt we, all men, owe. How can I possibly stand it? Oh, death! Who can evade you?"

"Ascend, ascend, brethren, ascend with eagerness and resolve in your hearts, listening to him who says: ‘Let us go up to the mountain of the Lord and to the house of our God, Who maketh our feet like those of the deer, and setteth us on high places, that we may be victorious with His song.’" - St. John Climacos

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