Now, I’ve watched this video along with multiple broadcasts of Tucker Carlson’s nightly show because I’ve genuinely wanted to see where he was coming from with his take on immigration policy. He’s been saying some provocatively interesting stuff while maintaining a “common sense” demeanor about him. His main sticking point is this: if you change the way our country looks so quickly, and doing so by bypassing legal channels, you are inviting massive friction and possible destruction. Further, average human beings simply cannot adapt to such rapid change in such a short amount of time. Tucker doesn’t confine this concept simply to immigration; he also identifies the massive yet unknowable influence the big tech companies are having on our society. We are building an entirely new infrastructure in this country. Correction: Google execs, AI robots, and illegal immigrants are building the new infrastructure in this country, and a large portion of American citizens are being swept under the rug.
I’ve seen counterpoints to Carlson’s observations, like Cenk Uygur bringing up that we’ve had waves of immigrants coming to this country before (
Returning to Cenk Uygur’s point about immigration having been achieved in the past with successful results, I would say we still haven’t reconciled these identity issues. Whites and blacks whose ancestors built this country have a completely different mindset with their own unique peculiarities compared to 4th or 5th generation Italians, Irish, Asians, etc. And I, as a first generation citizen whose parents both came from Middle Eastern countries, have my own mechanisms of conceptual distance from the image of America as a booming 20th century powerhouse. The stories of soldiers fighting in WWII don’t have as much of an effect on me as they would on some of you, simply because my ancestors didn’t fight for America or in the war at all. Whats’ funny, however, is that I feel conceptually closer to Revolutionary America than Industrialized 20th century America. And that’s because the education curriculum we grew up with in the 90s and early 2000s stressed the importance of the Constitutional values and principles that the Founding Fathers placed so much weight in. Civic nationalism, rather than ethnographic-nationalism, was a big thing for many in our generation. Civic nationalism is the belief that ideas like liberty, freedom, and justice are what can bond us in our attempt to breed a functioning nation. It’s what Tucker Carlson seems to believe in. But does it work? I really don’t know. What I do know is that America’s identity is splintered. And until we recognize and stop ignoring the reality that a nation is defined by its people’s posterity, the issues we face will compound in interest.