The US belongs to all nations
Not to Americans, or to the natives of the land:
Iran's
former hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad sent a letter Sunday to
President Donald Trump, striking a somewhat conciliatory tone while applauding
immigration to America and saying it shows "the contemporary U.S. belongs
to all nations."
It isn't the first dispatch sent by Ahmadinejad, who has counted U.S. Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama among his pen pals.
But this letter, weighing in at over 3,500 words, comes as criticism of Trump over his travel ban affecting seven Muslim-majority countries including Iran mounts in Tehran. It also may serve to burnish Ahmadinejad's image domestically after the nation's Supreme Leader warned him not to run in Iran's upcoming May presidential election.
In the letter, published by Iranian media outlets, Ahmadinejad noted Trump won the election while he "truthfully described the U.S. political system and electoral structure as corrupt."
Ahmadinejad decried U.S. "dominance" over the United Nations, as well as American meddling in the world that has brought "insecurity, war, division, killing and (the) displacement of nations."
He also acknowledged the some 1 million people of Iranian descent living in America, saying that U.S. policies should "value respect toward the diversity of nations and races."
"In other words, the contemporary U.S. belongs to all nations, including the natives of the land," he wrote. "No one may consider themselves the owner and view others as guests or immigrants."
It isn't the first dispatch sent by Ahmadinejad, who has counted U.S. Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama among his pen pals.
But this letter, weighing in at over 3,500 words, comes as criticism of Trump over his travel ban affecting seven Muslim-majority countries including Iran mounts in Tehran. It also may serve to burnish Ahmadinejad's image domestically after the nation's Supreme Leader warned him not to run in Iran's upcoming May presidential election.
In the letter, published by Iranian media outlets, Ahmadinejad noted Trump won the election while he "truthfully described the U.S. political system and electoral structure as corrupt."
Ahmadinejad decried U.S. "dominance" over the United Nations, as well as American meddling in the world that has brought "insecurity, war, division, killing and (the) displacement of nations."
He also acknowledged the some 1 million people of Iranian descent living in America, saying that U.S. policies should "value respect toward the diversity of nations and races."
"In other words, the contemporary U.S. belongs to all nations, including the natives of the land," he wrote. "No one may consider themselves the owner and view others as guests or immigrants."
One would think that the fact that
foreigners from Portugal, Libya, and Iran, from Hoyt to Gaddafi to Ahmadinejad,
so fervently endorse the concept of American civic nationalism, would give the
American adherents of the Zeroth Amendment, Magic Dirt, the Melting Pot,
Proposition Nationalism, and the sacred teachings of Judeo-Christ a moment's
pause.
But, of course, it doesn't. Because what passes for the civic nationalist's reasoning has absolutely nothing to do with reason, much less the copious and well-documented facts of history. The basis for the civic nationalist's civic nationalism is nothing more than wanting to believe that they are a good person, as defined by their adherence to the false historical propaganda of self-serving foreigners. And that submission to the false historical narrative is their gateway drug to the complete abandonment of the truth that is social justice convergence.
What was Gaius Julius Caesar but a Celt born in Rome, after all?
"We all bleed red," the President, himself a civic nationalist, says. But kangaroos and buffalo also bleed red, which makes it a nonsensical metric for defining marsupials, mammals, or Americans. It is, of course, nothing more than rhetoric designed to appeal to the unthinking civic nationalists and make them feel good.
When Ahmadinejad says that "the contemporary US belongs to all nations", he is stating openly that there is no American nation. Interestingly enough, and unlike most civic nationalists, he is precise enough to distinguish between America 1.0 and America 3.0. But the reason that he, and various other enemies of America, have so eagerly adopted the universalist idea of "everyone is an American" is because it harms the actual American nation, which is already fragmented and unable to clearly distinguish between itself and the rest of the world.
The 100-year psychological destruction of the American nation is one of the greatest psychological operations in history, and if you are a civic nationalist, then you need to know that you are an active participant in the destruction of the very nation and the very society that you claim to love.
A cannot be Not-A. American can never be Not-American. That is reason. That is logic. That is historical fact. To claim otherwise is to take the first step into the illogic that leads to madness, habitual dishonesty, and self-delusion.
But, of course, it doesn't. Because what passes for the civic nationalist's reasoning has absolutely nothing to do with reason, much less the copious and well-documented facts of history. The basis for the civic nationalist's civic nationalism is nothing more than wanting to believe that they are a good person, as defined by their adherence to the false historical propaganda of self-serving foreigners. And that submission to the false historical narrative is their gateway drug to the complete abandonment of the truth that is social justice convergence.
What was Gaius Julius Caesar but a Celt born in Rome, after all?
"We all bleed red," the President, himself a civic nationalist, says. But kangaroos and buffalo also bleed red, which makes it a nonsensical metric for defining marsupials, mammals, or Americans. It is, of course, nothing more than rhetoric designed to appeal to the unthinking civic nationalists and make them feel good.
When Ahmadinejad says that "the contemporary US belongs to all nations", he is stating openly that there is no American nation. Interestingly enough, and unlike most civic nationalists, he is precise enough to distinguish between America 1.0 and America 3.0. But the reason that he, and various other enemies of America, have so eagerly adopted the universalist idea of "everyone is an American" is because it harms the actual American nation, which is already fragmented and unable to clearly distinguish between itself and the rest of the world.
The 100-year psychological destruction of the American nation is one of the greatest psychological operations in history, and if you are a civic nationalist, then you need to know that you are an active participant in the destruction of the very nation and the very society that you claim to love.
A cannot be Not-A. American can never be Not-American. That is reason. That is logic. That is historical fact. To claim otherwise is to take the first step into the illogic that leads to madness, habitual dishonesty, and self-delusion.