A Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper
Log in
Subscribe

Editorials: Denying human rights

Feenstra gets a scare

Posted

President Joe Biden denies America’s best tradition and hopes, and forgets his own heritage, by severely restricting the ability of refugees to claim asylum in the United States. We are a nation of immigrants. Biden’s family came from Ireland, refugees from British starvation. Our attitudes about immigrants and refugees have always shifted through history. We are at one of those low points.

The politics informed by a false narrative — that we are being overrun at the Mexican border — demand that we deny basic human rights. This phony story has been sold for decades. The Know Nothings despised the Irish and Chinese. Now we hate on Latinos. Donald Trump, the Republican candidate for president, says that immigrants poison our blood. His wife is an immigrant.

Heirs to teeming masses yearning to be free agree with Trump — lock down the border, shut down asylum, build a wall and call in the National Guard because Pedro is crossing the Rio Grande with his family. So he can get to Storm Lake and cut hogs.

President Biden, who likes to quote the Irish poets, must appreciate the tragedy and futility of shutting off asylum requests. He is compelled by the polls to put his values in his back pocket and tell the Salvadoran hoping to scoop manure “tough luck.”

Rural Iowa is emptying out. Its buildings are vacant and falling down. Schools close. And we are saying that we are being overrun? That North Dakota is full up? That Pocahontas couldn’t use a few Cubans? That we don’t need the help around here? That we don’t need young people with families in rural America?

Yeah, that’s the message.

Biden acknowledged a worldwide refugee crisis as he issued his order shutting the door on refugees. He said he had no choice in the absence of congressional action, ongoing since the last immigration reform in 1986. The Senate and White House had a compromise border bill in hand, but Trump suffocated it because it would take away an election issue. So Biden rejuvenates a Trump policy of denying asylum requests, which already has been struck down in court. None of it makes sense. You do not solve immigration problems by foreclosing basic human rights. That’s un-American.


Feenstra gets a scare

Divisions among Iowa Republicans were evident in Tuesday’s primary elections. Rep. Randy Feenstra of Hull fended off a strong challenge from Kevin Virgil of Sutherland. Virgil indicted Feenstra for being too cozy with corporate interests, and tapped into opposition for carbon dioxide pipelines. Virgil attracted 37% of the primary vote in the Fourth Congressional District.

Populism is never far from the surface west of I-35. It kept Rep. Steve King in good stead for two decades. Feenstra takes money from Smithfield, a subsidiary of China, Inc., and that gave Virgil fodder. The challenger questioned the premise of ethanol, which is sacrosanct among the Iowa political establishment.

Virgil’s showing indicates that not all is well down on the farm. People are frustrated with the status quo. Not that they would go so far as to vote for a Democrat, Ryan Melton of Nevada, who articulates some of Virgil’s skepticism for the corporate order of things. The primary does indicate a fairly deep dissatisfaction with Feenstra within his own party in one of the most conservative districts in America. It’s because he is beholden to corporate money, pure and simple. Virgil held a light up to it.


$1 billion in loyalty

Donald Trump met with the titans of oil recently down in Texas and told them he would do anything they want if they would give him $1 billion for his campaign. People who support corn ethanol have to be crazy to vote for him. Big oil hates ethanol. When he was president, Trump attempted to waive ethanol blending requirements for petroleum refiners. He would shut down the ethanol industry if Houston told him to, and it will. Oil companies have been fighting ethanol forever. Trump could not care less about Iowa farmers, yet they appear to love him for no good reason. The oil titans probably will come through with the $1 billion, since the alternative would be clean energy.

Comments

No comments on this item Please log in to comment by clicking here