“Ugly Americans” Bare Their Fangs at Home
You might be old enough to remember a book (and movie) titled “The Ugly American.” The tale portrayed Americans who behave offensively in a fictional Asian country.
In the story, a “native” journalist remarks:
For some reason, the [American] people I meet in my country are not the same as the ones I knew in the United States. A mysterious change seems to come over Americans when they go to a foreign land. They isolate themselves socially. They live pretentiously. They’re loud and ostentatious.
The “reason,” I believe, is that Americans – white Americans – have an inbred sense of superiority. Most of them, anyway. It is true that there is an enlightened minority, but you seldom hear from them today.
Now, the “ugly Americans” don’t have to be in a foreign country to show their offensive nature. The “foreign country” has come to them, and they are displaying their worst traits here at home.
I am referring specifically to the blatantly racist Arizona law requiring state police to stop “suspicious looking” people and demand proof of legal U.S. residence (photo above, right).
A federal judge has slapped down key elements of the law, and granted the Obama administration a temporary injunction against its implementation, which was scheduled for today.
You would think the ruling would elicit nationwide applause. After all this is America, the Land of the Free. You wouldn’t expect legalized racial profiling and police harassment to be welcome here… Or would you?
The ugly truth is that most Americans support the law. And several American states are in the process of enacting similar legislation.
Indeed, media commentators are saying the Democratic Party will “pay a political price” for Obama’s challenge to the law.
Here’s how the UK Guardian sees it:
The legal ruling risks a potential white backlash as opinion polls have shown consistently high support for the law across the United States…
Mark Krikorian, director of the Center for Immigration Studies, a think tank that supports tighter immigration controls, said a hardening of positions was likely in the wake of the ruling. “This will add fuel to the frustrations of states over the lack of federal government action in enforcing the immigration laws.”
I find it revealing that the latest CNN poll shows 55 percent of Americans like the Arizona law. (Some polls put the approval rate even higher.) If you consider that about 75 percent of the U.S. population is white, you might come to the conclusion that more than 70 percent of the white population supports the racist law. (I can’t see a significant number of Hispanics or African Americans telling the pollsters they’re in favor of it. Can you?)
It’s just one of the many manifestations of white racism that have been in the news recently. The “far right” has been on a racist rampage, triggered no doubt by the election of America’s first black president. But they’re not alone.
More troubling is evidence of a deep and wide current of white resentment in mainstream America. The only mitigating factor I can find is that the vast majority of racists are quite old. Younger Americans tend to be far more tolerant.
So I am comforted by the promise that time will “cure all ills,” as the sages tell us it does.



5 comments
I don’t want all these illegal Mexicans here. My Jamaicans need those farm worker jobs and we speak English. They need to stand in line like every one else. The Mexicans love to talk about discrimination but look how they treat Afro Mexican and Tiano Mexicans. Do you ever see a dark skinned Mexican in media reading the news or prominent roles on TV? The only time you see Afro Latinos are as slaves or workers in the Spanish Soap Operas. Can you name one Novella where the actors or actresses weren’t the White looking Latinos? How does Mexico treat their illegals? Now, talk about calling the kettle Black.
You are too funny Janice! Excellent use of irony to show that bigotry is not just restricted to “whites”.
I have to say that if the law says that ANYONE can be stopped for paperwork to show that they are LEGALLY in the United States, I would go for that.
I myself am an immigrant here in the US and went through the right and legal channels to be here, and be able to work here and pay taxes.
When I got my green card I was told I had to carry it with me wherever I went. If not to prove I am here legally, then why tell me I have to carry it everywhere?
If you come to the US to live you must be legal, I dont feel sorry for anyone who is thrown out for not doing things the “right” way. Why one rule for one and another for others. Now THAT is discrimination!
But we are not required to carry proof of citizenship.
Only the federal government can make that law and require it be enforced and I do not want to be required to carry it. When they impose these restrictions on some, then all are restricted.
The outcome of this law is that everyone would have to be prepared to prove that they are here legally. Citizens are not exempt from harrassment. There is no way to tell if you are here legally or illegally until they see your papers.
I for one don’t want to have to produce my papers to avoid arrest.
It smells too much like Nazi Germany to me.
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