University of Southern California professor David Ulin has written an op-ed in the LA Times warning that our detention policies on the US-Mexico border could be leading us into something akin to Nazi Germany's policies toward Jews. It deserves a response. Below is the article:
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Why ‘never
again’ is right now in America
By David L. Ulin
Source: https://enewspaper.latimes.com/infinity/article_share.aspx?guid=97bc0d5b-f5b3-475a-9cf7-ca4101b0cbe4
We live in
a country where people are being held in concentration camps.
I’m Jewish; I do
not use the term “concentration camp” lightly. I know all the ways it’s
dangerous to compare what is happening now in the United States with what took
place in Germany three-quarters of a century ago. As Edna Friedberg of the
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum rightly pointed out last month, glib
comparisons to Nazi atrocities undermine history and the cruel complexities of
the Jewish genocide. We should not, as she observed, rely on “Holocaust terminology
to bash anyone or any policy with which [we] disagree.”
Still, with every
new revelation of abuses at the southern border, as well as the threats of ICE
raids and deportation actions in sanctuary cities, I find myself agreeing with
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), who prompted Friedberg’s warning with
this Instagram post last month: “The fact that concentration camps are now an
institutionalized practice in the home of the free is extraordinarily
disturbing, and we need to do something about it.”
Ocasio-Cortez’s
rhetoric is provocative; that’s the point. She’s trying to stir us up. “I want
to talk to the people who are concerned enough … to say that ‘never again’
means something,” her post went on.
That’s me. I stand
with every Jew who has begun to say loudly and directly that “never again” is
now.
Of course, the
situation in this country is distinct from what occurred in Nazi Germany. I
don’t use the phrase “concentration camp” to equate the two but to illustrate a
variation on a horrendous theme.
In 1946, George
Orwell addressed the relationship of language to reality and suggested that
euphemism, not imperfect analogy, was the real danger. If we don’t use shocking
language to describe a shocking circumstance, can we truly recognize what is
happening?
“To see what is in
front of one’s nose needs a constant struggle,” Orwell wrote. At a time when
the counterfactual is commonplace, he nails our predicament.
Republican
lawmakers reflexively label Ocasio-Cortez and other progressive Democrats as
anti-Semitic. This is its own sort of affront, as if the Jewish community
existed to provide cover for the inhumanity of the administration’s border
policy. Who are those politicians to speak for us? At the same time, some
prominent Jewish leaders have chosen to echo that fallacious charge.
In a recent Fox
News opinion piece, Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los
Angeles called Ocasio-Cortez’s remarks “obscene, shockingly ignorant, and an
insult to the memory of the 6 million Jews and millions of others murdered by
the Nazis.” Another Los Angeles rabbi, David Wolpe, argued: “Analogies that
evoke the Holocaust are, with the rarest of exceptions, presumptively offensive
and unwise.”
With all due
respect, in this case the rabbis are wrong.
Let me say it once
more: What the U.S. government is doing to migrants and asylum seekers, however
shameful and inhuman, is not equivalent to the Holocaust. There is no organized
extermination program, no slave labor. We are not gassing anyone.
The Final Solution,
however, did not emerge full-on but incrementally. It was implemented in 1941,
but its roots lie in Hitler’s anti-Jewish policies in the early 1930s — the
normalization of discrimination and hate speech, then the detentions and the
stripping away of rights. Sound familiar? Remembering the progression makes it
all the more important that we use the right words to describe what we are
seeing, in real time.
Concentration
camps, historian Andrea Pitzer has written, have a long, precise lineage. “Mass
detention without trial,” she explained recently in the New York Review of
Books, “earned a new name and a specific identity at the end of the nineteenth
century. The labels then adopted for the practice were ‘reconcentración’ and
‘concentration camps’ — places of forced relocation of civilians into detention
on the basis of group identity.”
If that doesn’t
define what’s happening at the border, what does?
It is because of
the Holocaust that we must refer to the government’s detention centers as
“concentration camps.” We become complicit if we do not speak up. We know the
cost of silence. Calling the camps by their true name does not demean or
diminish the Holocaust; it respects the millions who died. Our bearing witness
is their legacy.
Eighty years ago,
in Germany, I would not have been allowed to write this in a newspaper.
Seventy-five years ago, I would not have been allowed to live. I write it
today, not because the situations are perfectly analogous, but because we must
do everything in our power to ensure they never are.
David L.
Ulin is a contributing writer to Opinion.
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Below is the text of my letter to the Editor, LA Times as a reader response.:
As a Christian who is deeply concerned about the resurgence in anti-semitism worldwide, I take exception to Professor Ulin's comparison of our illegal alien detention centers to Nazi concentration camps. Contrary to what Ulin would have us believe, Alexandria Osasio-Cortez's remarks were totally off the mark and based on unverified complaints of one female detainee.
The fact is that our Customs and Border agents and the border itself are overwhelmed by a massive human influx into our country that is unprecedented. They do not have the funding, the manpower, the facilities, or the resources to adequately handle the problem. In addition, they are being condemned as "human rights violators" by those on the left.
Any comparisons to Nazi Germany are absurd-even to suggest that we are drifting in that direction. Nazi Germany was not being invaded by Jews or anybody else trying to cross their borders without permission. Those they placed in camps like Dachau and Buchenwald were political opponents, Jews, and others they deemed unfavorable. The Jews were not trying to kill Hitler or overthrow the regime. Of course, we all know that with World War II came the extermination camps in Poland, like Auschwitz. Does Professor Ulin actually see us headed in that direction?
Rather than try to invent a connection between Jews and people trying to enter our country illegally, even using political asylum as a scam- which in most cases, it is a scam- Ulin should be paying more attention to the actual purveyors of today's anti-Semitism. As a USC professor, he wouldn't have to look far. The focal point of the resurgence of Jew hatred in the US is on our university campuses in the form of anti-Israel agitation.
Gary Fouse
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Gary Fouse
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1 comment:
Yah, I get it. Illegals coming to America jump fences to get into Concentration Camps to get exterminated. Makes perfect sense. Not.
The point of language is important here as you say Gary. The Far Left is attempting to use terms that bring on memories of horror and assign them to conditions which would never fit in reality. Joseph Goebbels calls it propaganda.
Squid
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