On July 4, 1776 members of the Second Continental Congress,
meeting in Philadelphia, adopted the final draft of the Declaration of
Independence, one of the most stirring, democratic and egalitarian statements
of the modern era.
Donald Trump, the presumptive republican candidate for president,
who has elevated xenophobia and immigrant baiting to an anti-American art form,
would benefit from a careful reading.
The Declaration was a revolutionary document. Not only did it
declare the thirteen colonies independence from the British Monarchy, but it
challenged the accepted structures of inequality that had previously governed
the affairs of mankind.
For centuries human beings had lived in highly structured,
hierarchical societies. Economic and political power was the inherited
birthright of a privileged few. Most people were subjects, slaves, indentured
servants, and peasants, destined to serve their superiors, the lord, the
monarch, and the priest. As Aristotle wrote, “Some men are born to rule and
some to be ruled.”
The Declaration of
Independence challenged the idea that all men were created unequally by
asserting the opposite: “…that all men are created equal, that they are endowed
by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life,
Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”
This document turned man’s understanding of the world upside down
and laid the basis for an expansive and inclusive democracy even if its
principle author was the slave owner,
Thomas Jefferson.
The defeat of the British led to the establishment of a new
government that restricted citizenship to white male property owners. But the
Declaration inspired labor republicans, country democrats, abolitionists,
suffragettes, freemen, immigrants, civil rights and LGBT activists who used the
words to extend the rights of citizenship more broadly.
The Declaration lists a series of grievances against King George,
the British monarch who ruled the thirteen colonies. While it is well known
that the patriots opposed taxation without representation, being forced to
house and feed the occupying British troops, and the British monopoly control of
commerce, it is rarely mentioned that restrictive immigration policies were
another important grievance. Yet the document condemns King George for
preventing immigration to the colonies, “obstructing the Laws for
Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their
migrations hither….”
The nation the Declaration inspired had no laws restricting
immigration until the racist Chinese Exclusion Act was passed in 1882. As the
Statue of Liberty proclaimed, we were a nation that welcomed the world’s hungry
and poor yearning to breathe free. Only after WWI were discriminatory quotas
imposed on immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe.
In the Twenty-First Century, undocumented workers who do our
nation's hardest, most dangerous and dirtiest work and their children have
picked up where the Patriots left off, asserting that they are human beings
with rights denied. Their dream is the same as earlier generations of refugees
and immigrants from England, Ireland, Poland, Germany, Italy, Russia and
elsewhere to work hard, provide for their families and contribute to America’s
great experiment in democratic governance.
Donald Trump’s threat to deport elven million immigrants who live
and work in the United States and his plan to build a wall between the United
States and Mexico are contrary to the spirit of the Declaration of Independence
and its vision of a new, free self-governing nation.
So as we celebrate this weekend, take a moment to remember that
two hundred and thirty-seven years ago thirteen sparsely populated Atlantic
outposts of farmers, servants, slaves and merchants declared that all men were
created equal with inalienable rights. Since that day freedom loving people
from Selma to Tienanmen Square, from France to Arizona have been inspired by
the patriots’ struggle to create a nation of free and equal citizens.
There is no better way to celebrate July 4th than to work for the defeat of Donald
Trump. A resounding repudiation of his anti- American views will pressure Congress to pass comprehensive immigration
reform with a path to citizenship for our nation’s latest wave of immigrants. That
would give all of us who love this country’s promise something to celebrate.
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