“Does it take an Osama bin Laden, as it did for Rachel Newman, to make us realize that we are Americans?”
“'America, more than any other nation, may have been born to die.' Yet some societies, confronted with serious challenges to their existence, are also able to postpone their demise and halt disintegration, by renewing their sense of national identity, their national purpose, and the cultural values they have in common.”
“Modernization, economic development, urbanization, and globalization have led people to rethink their identities and to redefine them in narrower, more intimate, communal terms. Subnational cultural and regional identities are taking precedence over broader national identities.”
“Nationalist movements affirmed the equality of citizens, thereby undermining class and status distinctions.”
“The seventeenth and eighteenth-century settlers came to America because it was a tabula rasa. Apart from Indian tribes, which could be killed off or pushed westward, no society was there; and they came in order to create societies that embodied and would reinforce the culture and values they brought with them from their origin country. Immigrants came later because they wanted to become part of the society the settlers had created.”
“The American Creed, in short, is Protestantism without God, the secular credo of the ‘nation with the soul of a church.’”
“Civil religion converts Americans from religious people of many denominations into a nation with the soul of a church.”
“The American civil religion is Christianity without Christ.”
“No nation exists in the absence of a national history, enshrining in the minds of its people common memories of their travails and triumphs, heroes and villains, enemies and wars, defeats and victories.”
“The Civil War, Woodrow Wilson said in his 1915 Memorial Day A address, 'created in this country what had never existed before, a national consciousness.'”
“Americanization made immigration acceptable to Americans.”
“The governments of nation-states, in contrast, attempted to promote the unity of their people, the development of national consciousness, the suppression of subnational regional and ethnic loyalties, the universal use of the national language, and the allocation of benefits to those who conform to the national norm.”
"'Racial classifications of any sort,' she wrote, 'pose the risk of lasting harm to our society. They reinforce the belief, held by too many for too much of our history, that individuals should be judged by the color of their skin.' Race conscious districts 'may balkanize us into competing racial factions...'”
“The substantial benefits from immigration in terms of economic growth, demographic revitalization, and maintenance of international status and influence may be countered by the costs of higher spending on government services, fewer jobs, lower wages, and reduced benefits for native workers, social polarization, cultural conflict, decline in trust and community, and erosion of traditional concepts of national identity. The immigration issue may produce serious divisions among elite groups, arouse popular opinion against immigrants and immigration, and offer opportunities for nationalist and populist politicians and parties to exploit these sentiments.”
“American policy has thus been based on the assumption that assimilation requires dispersion.”
“Businesses have supported English language training to meet their own very immediate needs, not as a result of, a more general concern with Americanization or as part of a broader Americanization movement. In some measure, the general lack of interest of businesses in the broader aspects of Americanization undoubtedly reflected their international involvements and the transnational and cosmopolitan identities of their leaders.”
“In the earlier phase, businesses were more concerned with making immigrants into efficient producers of their products than making them consumers of those products. In the consumer society of a hundred years later, however, as immigrant numbers and purchasing power expanded, businesses had to appeal to that growing market.”
“Those governments, first, want to encourage their emigrants to maintain contacts with their origin societies and, in particular, to provide remittances to their families and localities in those societies. Second, they want their migrants to become American citizens so they can participate in the American political processes and advance the interests of the sending country.”
“The vitality of a democracy depends on the extent to which its citizens participate in civic associations, public life, and politics. Most citizens are stretched to take an interest in and participate in the public affairs of a single community and a single country. Giving them the opportunity and the incentives to be involved in the public life of a second community and a second country means they will either neglect one and focus on the other or only marginally and intermittently participate in both. Citizenship becomes less a matter of identity and more one of utility.”
“The billions of dollars that ampersands send abroad are also billions of dollars they do not invest in building homes, establishing businesses, creating jobs, and improving their communities in the United States.”
“In 1994, Mexican-Americans vigorously demonstrated against California's Proposition 187, limiting welfare benefits to children of illegal immigrants, by marching through the streets of Los Angeles waving scores of Mexican flags and carrying American flags upside down.”
"'Mexican-Americans,' as David Kennedy says, will have open to them possibilities closed to previous immigrant groups. They will have sufficient coherence and critical mass in a defined region so that, if they choose, they can preserve their distinct culture indefinitely. They could also eventually undertake to do what no previous immigrant group could have dreamed of doing: challenge the existing cultural, political, legal, commercial, and educational systems to change fundamentally not only the language but also the very institutions in which they do business."
“The American economy is becoming one of highly segmented markets with sales appeals tailored to the specialized tastes and preferences of particular groups. These two trends have provided powerful incentives for American corporations to direct special appeals to the Hispanic market.”
“The absence of an other until 2001, the spread of democracy, the denationalization of elites, and the rise of diasporas all blur the distinction between national and transnational identities.”
“In 84 BC, when Rome defeated its last serious enemy, Mithradates, Sulla asked: 'Now that the universe offers us no more enemies, what may be the fate of the Republic?'”
"What happens to a nation's sense of identity when its enemies are utterly vanquished, and no longer provide the energizing force of a threat to that nation's very existence?"
“The end of the Cold War, two scholars warned in 1994, will 'erode national political cohesiveness as ethnic and sectional differences come to the fore' and 'make the achievement of internal social equity and welfare more dificult, reinvigorating class divisions.'”
“Paul Peterson saw the end of the Cold War leading to, among other things, an 'ever more foggy sense of the national interest,' 'decreasing willingness to incur sacrifices for one's country;' 'dwindling trust in government,' 'softening of moral commitment,' and 'declining perceived need for experienced political leadership.' In the absence of an external enemy, individual self-interest trumps national commitment.”
“American elites, government agencies, businesses, and other organizations have been far more important in the globalization process than those of other countries. Hence their commitments to national identities and national interests could be relatively weaker.”
“The economic globalizers are fixated on the world as an economic unit. For them home is the global market, not the national community.”
“As the global market replaces the national community, the national citizen gives way to the global consumer.”
"The challenge to national citizenship posed by multiculturalism pales before the creation of truly global corporations that put their faith in the bottom line before their love of country." 'The cosmocrats,' John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge say, 'are increasingly cut off from the rest of society'”
“These leftists have done 'a great deal of good for women, African-Americans, gay men and lesbians....But there is a problem with this left: it is unpatriotic.' It 'repudiates the idea of a national identity, and the emotion of national pride.' If the left is to have influence, it must recognize that a 'sense of shared national identity..is an absolutely essential component of citizenship.' Without patriotism the left will be unable to achieve its goals for America.”
“Governments see it in their interest to encourage emigration, to expand, mobilize, and organize their diasporas, and to institutionalize their homeland connections so as to promote homeland interests in host countries. Developed countries exert influence in world affairs through the export of capital, technology, economic aid, and military power. Poor overpopulated countries exert influence through the export of people.”
“Increased and diversified immigration to America is multiplying, however, the numbers of diasporic communities and their actual and potential political influence. As a result, conflicts abroad between opposing homelands increasingly become conflicts in America between opposing diasporas.”
“One very plausible reaction would be the emergence of exclusivist sociopolitical movements composed largely but not only of white males, primarily working-class and middle-class, protesting and attempting to stop or reverse these changes and what they believe, accurately or not, to be the diminution of their social and economic status, their loss of jobs to immigrants and foreign countries, the perversion of their culture, the displacement of their language, and the erosion or even evaporation of the historical identity of their country. Such movements would be both racially and culturally inspired and could be anti-Hispanic, anti-black, and anti-immigration.”
“For several decades interest groups and nonelected governmental elites have promoted racial preferences, affirmative action, and minority language and cultural maintenance programs, which violate the American Creed and serve the interests of blacks and nonwhite immigrant groups. The globalization policies of business elites have shifted jobs overseas and contributed to growing income inequality and a decline in real wages of working-class Americans. The liberal establishment media is seen by some whites as using double standards in reporting crimes against blacks, gays, and women, as compared to those against white males. The large and continuing influx of Hispanics threatens the preeminence of white Anglo-Protestant culture and the place of English as the only national language. White nativist movements are a possible and plausible response to these trends, and in situations of serious economic downturn and hardship they could be highly probable.”
“In America, white nativism is likely to materialize not in a new political party but in a new political movement that will aim to influence the choice of candidates and policies by the two dominant parties.”
“The orientation of businesses to Hispanic customers means that they increasingly need bilingual employees. For many it also symbolized a reversal of the expectation that the newcomers must adjust to the dominant language and culture. Even worse, it conferred upon immigrants a labor market advantage based on a need that had been created by their own presence.”
"Social science faculties at elite institutions are overwhelmingly liberal and cosmopolitan or on the Left. Almost any form of civic loyalty or patriotism is considered reactionary."
“Prior to World War II, American business, social, and political elites often opposed immigration, and, of course, were responsible for the 1921 and 1924 laws restricting it. In the late twentieth century, however, elite opposition decreased markedly. Adherents of neoliberal economics, such as Julian Simon and the Wall Street Journal, argued that the free movement of people was as essential to globalization and economic growth as the free movement of goods, capital, and technology. Business elites welcomed the depressing effect immigration would have on the wages of workers and the power of unions. Leading liberals supported immigration for humanitarian reasons and as a way of reducing the gross inequalities between rich and poor countries. Restrictions on the immigration of any particular nationality were viewed as politically incorrect, and efforts to limit immigration generally were at times thought to be inherently suspect as racist attempts to maintain white dominance in America.”
“Without that inheritance, no nation exists, and if the plebiscite rejects that inheritance, the nation ends. America is 'a nation with the soul of a church.' The soul of a church, however, does not exist solely or even primarily in its theological dogma, but in its rituals, hymns, practices, moral commandments and prohibitions, liturgy, prophets, saints, gods, and devils. So also a nation may, as America does, have a creed, but its soul is defined by the common history, traditions, culture, heroes and vilains, victories and defeats, enshrined in its 'mystic chords of memory.'”
“America cannot become the world and still be America.”