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[OPE-L] How grandma got legal
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Title: How grandma got legal
Since Mae Ngai is a
brilliant historian, she thinks we
need a history
lesson. But let's get serious about the political
context of this
immigration scare, though Ngai
shows how with the
requirements of visas and passports
(especially
following the national-statism consolidated by the Great
War)
and the ending of
the statute of limitations, the "illegal alien"
was
invented just as
homosexuality and childhood have been invented kinds.
Ngai has rightly won
many accolades for this most important study of kind
making.
Jonathan Xavier Inda
draws from her work in his Targeting Immigrants.
Yet the present
'crisis' is not the result of historical
misapprehension!
How is the state to
legitimize itself if its tax structure
is regressive, its
public spending a defacto private subsidy and
its military
strategy failed and catastrophic?
The state seeks
legitimacy through its assertion of the sovereignty of its
borders--
it can thereby claim to
protect national citizens from welfare cheats,
job stealers and terrorists. Not the domestic ones--not the subsidized
and downsizing
corporations and the
wiretappers and the intolerant thugs who
join the Militias
and the Minutemen. But the foreign ones
Or at least the
state must appear to protect us from the non
national threats as
Joseph Nevins lays out in his important Operation
Gatekeeper.
So as poll ratings
plummet Bush has declared himself
the chief commander
of the minutemen. Given that our essentially juridical social
relations are instrumental, highly conflictual
and alienated, the
only community we can share is as equal citizens
of the sovereign
nation state (see Marx On the Jewish Question). Popular sovereignty is thereby alienated in
sovereign control over the borders. The border
war is a hallucination of popular
sovereignty. The deployment of troops and the building of walls are in
large part images--part and parcel of the society of
spectacle.
As social life tears
us apart and the state loses the veneer of universality--indeed
Nevins' findings suggest that the obsession with border security
coincides roughly with the collapse of Keynesianism into stagflation
in the mid 1970s--nationalism can still bring us together as abstract
citizen subjects; and nationalism is stoked by anti illegal immigrant
sentiment (which redounds on even those who are legal residents or
citizens by naturalization or birth).
Of course the call
for the border patrol is grand-standing though the resulting deaths
will be real. But once the mainstream parties hail the right
wing thugs
such as the
minutemen to ride out the wave of popular discontent,
they will have given
the state's legitimacy to violent forces
that they will not
be able to control.
To secure rule Bush
has called on the evangelists and racist thugs.
We will thus have to
contend with them for some to come.
Our political life
has been poisoned.
The new border war is not in
capital's direct interest but it is in the interest of
stabilizing alienated commodity
relations through the creation of national unity.
James O Connor may say that
accumulation is sacrificed for legitimacy.
Rakesh
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