Explicitly racist policy is the new normal
Brad
Reed for Common Dreams
According to Reuters, American diplomats in
South Africa earlier this month asked the U.S. State Department whether it was
allowed to process refugee claims from South African citizens who spoke the
Afrikaans language but who were of mixed-race descent.
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The Trump regime argues the white Afrikaners will be easier to assimilate in American culture than refugees of color. Here's an example of their proof. |
Trump back in February issued an executive order establishing a refugee program for what the order described as "Afrikaners in South Africa who are victims of unjust racial discrimination." The president also lobbed baseless accusations at South African President Cyril Ramaphosa this past May that his government was engaging in "genocide" against white farmers in his country.
The notion that whites in South Africa face severe racial
discrimination, let alone the threat of genocide, is difficult to square with
the reality that white South Africans own three-quarters of the private land in
the nation despite being a mere 7% of the population.
Dara Lind of the American Immigration Council, reacting to
the Reuters report, explained on social media platform Bluesky the reasons
that Trump's refugee program for Afrikaners is highly unusual. Lind pointed to
the fact that the United States government at the moment is still trying to
block refugees who have already gone through a two-year vetting process from
entering the country, whereas it let many Afrikaner refugees into the country
after a mere two weeks of vetting.
"Two years of vetting is insufficient, but two weeks is
enough to know if someone will 'be assimilated easily'—as admin officials said
when the Afrikaners came," she observed.