Trump’s language on migration is not accidental; it is a political weapon. When he calls entire nations “hell holes” and describes people as “filthy” or “disgusting,” he is not diagnosing a policy failure; he is manufacturing a racial hierarchy. Racism becomes the spectacle, pulling attention away from crises the US political system has failed to confront.
What makes this rhetoric especially dishonest is what it leaves out. Many of the countries Trump demonises did not become unstable in a vacuum. Afghanistan, Somalia, and Haiti have been shaped by decades of US foreign policy, invasions, proxy wars, sanctions, drone strikes, coups, and political meddling. Washington helped fracture institutions, fuel conflict, and extract resources, then turned around and criminalised the human consequences of that history.
This framing is shameless because it redirects public anger away from domestic failure. Instead of explaining why millions of Americans lack healthcare, why homelessness is exploding, or why gun violence and inequality persist, Trump offers migrants as a convenient enemy. Blame flows downward, never upward.
It is also baseless. The countries he attacks have produced doctors, engineers, care workers, and laborers who keep US hospitals, farms, and cities running. Meanwhile, America’s crime, poverty, and social breakdown are homegrown, the result of policy choices and neglect, not migration.
The danger deepens when rhetoric becomes enforcement. ICE is no longer acting only against undocumented migrants. US citizens have been detained, legal residents questioned, students threatened. The boundary between immigration control and internal policing is being deliberately blurred.
This is how authoritarian politics advances. First, you dehumanise people abroad. Then you normalise repression at home. While Americans argue over who belongs, the real crises grow unchecked.
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