Season of Hate, Revisted
In Tropic of Chaos by Christain Parenti, chapter 15 discusses the ways in which an armed lifeboat approach to immigration and climate change is manifested within America. Parenti specifically touches on the anti-immigrant sentiments that extremist right-wing individuals hold toward Latinx individuals who come to this country looking for a better life. The author argues that at its core, hatred towards immigrants is largely based around "...very much a war of ideas" (Parenti, 231). This chapter also spoke on how a majority of Americans at the time the book was written were straight-up xenophobic towards immigrants in the country, 67 percent of Americans surveyed at the time said that they felt it was fine for the police to arrest anyone who had no way to prove legal citizenship, and 62 percent felt it was ok for the police to target individuals for questioning based off of profiling them as being illegal immigrants (Parenti, 232). This specific chapter also focused on the irony behind individuals who label themselves as liberal, but still subscribe to that armed lifeboat policy in terms of climate change migration.
We as a society have handled the situation of immigration increasingly worse, in my opinion, since the publication of this book. The season of hate has lasted for many many seasons, and a big reason behind that is the extremist right-wing politicians who have been elected to run this country. According to AFSC, Donald Trump described who came from, as he said, "shithole countries" and as "animals". This rhetoric is damaging for how those who support his ideals and creates mass hatred and misinformation about immigrants.
Governors such as Greg Abbott, Doug Doucey, and Ron DeSantis use their platforms to spew false information about immigrants and make a mockery of them in the media. More than 6,000 immigrants were sent by Abbott to Washington D.C. in 2022 with no service plan in place for them put in place. Not only are they leaving the countries that they are from (a difficult task on its own), but then they are forced to get on a bus for 36 hours- only to end up in cities that are unprepared to assist large levels of migrants with very little notice. Despite this, the immigrants getting bussed around remained hopeful for their situations, saying “The food isn’t that good, but thank God they’re helping us with this,”. It is so profound and heartbreaking that even in the face of hardships, they remained grateful to be out of the awful situations they left behind in Latin American countries.
The season of hate gets even worse in the United States during election seasons. Last year during election season, 700 paid for ads were viewed by over 52.6 million individuals on social media. This increase in hatred and xenophobic propaganda leads to an increased feeling of uneasiness in the Latinx community, and mental health issues, and leads to a sense of feeling as if they do not belong in the United States.


Rich post. And there is a long history of American intervention, often military, in the countries from which many Americans now fear immigration. That is not only ironic, but can be connected, as these interventions destabilized countries. And I suppose greenhouse gasses could be seen as another intervention - part of the cause of migration.
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