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A New York Times editorial: Into the void, with Rep. Steve King

 
Published March 15, 2017

Many Americans have been marveling at the bald racism of Steve King, Republican member of Congress from Iowa's 4th District, who said this over the weekend on Twitter:

"Wilders understands that culture and demographics are our destiny. We can't restore our civilization with somebody else's babies."

He was praising Geert Wilders, a far-right Dutch politician who wants to close his country to Muslims, whom he calls "scum." What King said about civilization and babies was a little cryptic. On CNN, he elaborated:

"There's an American culture, American civilization. It's raised within these children in these American homes. That's one of the reasons why we require that the president of the United States be raised with an American experience. We've also aborted nearly 60 million babies in this country since 1973.

"There's been this effort we're going to have to replace that void with somebody else's babies. That's the push to bring in much illegal immigration into America, living in enclaves, refusing to assimilate into the American culture and civilization."

Earth to King: Illegal immigration is not an abortion-linked repopulation scheme. Immigrants in America do assimilate. They have for centuries, and the latest newcomers will do the same, given the chance, as will their children and grandchildren. And if by "American culture and civilization" you mean a Christian, English-only whitopia, then a lot of Americans will object to your framing. Some might even wonder whether your hostility to American values reflects your own failure to assimilate. But that's America for you.

A few in his party have condemned his latest rant, but the White House has been silent. King's world view harmonizes nicely with the architects of President Donald Trump's anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim policies, Steve Bannon and Stephen Miller, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who was among the hardest of Senate immigration hard-liners.

Together they are pushing an old nativists' dream: a "self-deportation" strategy, also called "attrition through enforcement," which envisions making America whiter by making life intolerable for unauthorized immigrants. Their crackdown is hurting not only those here illegally but also refugees, asylum-seekers, even students and guest workers.

Meanwhile, the damage is piling up. Bomb threats terrorize mosques and synagogues; vandals attack Jewish cemeteries; confused racists attack South Asians. In these conditions, hate effloresces. In the United States, intolerance is in breakout.

That is why King — and his journey from the fringe — matters.