By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, July 16, 2019
Beto O’Rourke, the losing Texas Senate candidate who
bootstrapped his way into becoming a losing presidential candidate, had a
message for refugees who had come to America: Your new country is a hellhole.
The former congressman told a roundtable of refugees and
immigrants in Nashville, Tenn., last week: “This country was founded on white
supremacy. And every single institution and structure that we have in this
country still reflects the legacy of slavery and segregation and Jim Crow and
suppression.”
Just in case the newcomers were inclined to believe that
they had escaped to the greatest country on Earth, an open, dynamic, generous
society that, whatever their struggles now, will afford them opportunities
unimaginable back home — Beto was there to tell them of all its sins.
He had made himself into an instrument of woke
assimilation.
This is the backdrop of the controversy over Ilhan Omar,
the Somali-born left-wing member of Congress whom Donald Trump urged, in
particularly noxious tweets, to return to her native country and fix it before
presuming to tell us what to do.
It’s a mistake, though, to think that Omar is anything
other than on her way to total assimilation, only on the terms set out by Beto
O’Rourke.
American has two assimilation problems. One is immigrants
feeling only a tenuous connection to America, and getting isolated in ethnic
enclaves. The other is immigrants like Omar — and some of her second-generation
colleagues — assimilating into the America of identity politics and grievance.
They have learned to speak not just English, but the
language of oppression. They understand our system (at least no less than the
average officeholder) but hold it in low regard. They know our history, as
taught by an instructor cribbing from Howard Zinn.
They may be citizens, but they are certainly outraged
victims.
According to a profile in the Washington Post,
Omar felt betrayal immediately upon getting to America.
“I arrived at the age of 12 and learned that I was the
extreme other,” she explained to the Post, noting bullying when she was
in school in Arlington, Va., an affluent Washington, D.C., suburb. “I was
black. I was Muslim. I also learned I was extremely poor and that the classless
America that my father talked about didn’t exist.”
Somehow, despite all the depredations, she gained a seat
in Congress. It wasn’t paeans to her new home that paved her way, but the
tropes and priorities of a progressive Left, as you’d expect from a former
director of the Women Organizing Women Network.
Omar doesn’t represent a majority-minority district. She
started her elected career, as the Post puts it, by getting to know
“older peace-and-justice hippies.” She attended Black Lives Matter protests and
established relationships with all the left-wing groups in Minneapolis.
Most of these people wouldn’t object to, indeed would
welcome and expect, her adversarial posture toward the country where she gained
more notoriety and power than the vast majority of the native-born.
Her narrative is the narrative of American malignancy.
The Post wrote of her ambush of Trump official Elliott Abrams at a
hearing: “For decades people like her had been on the receiving end of U.S.
foreign policy. Such people typically get ‘beaten into submission,’ she said.
Now, Omar was the one delivering the beating.”
Her default is to blame America first. She explained that
local Somali-Americans attempted to join the Islamic State as a function of
“systemic alienation.” She contends that she has met American veterans “who say
the most horrendous things, who have complete disregard for life.” And she
accuses her congressional colleagues of singling her out for demonization.
Anyone who thinks these attitudes are alien to America
has never been to a college campus or watched MSNBC. In short, whatever
foolhardy things Trump may tweet, Ilhan Omar is not suited to return and fix
Somalia, rather to join a segment of the American elite.
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