Sometimes, the Best Americans Aren’t Americans

Sadly, the naturalization process is rooted in suspicion and fear of the “other”

Tim Wise
GEN
Published in
6 min readOct 26, 2021

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Image: Jana Shea, Shutterstock, standard license, purchased by author

As the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 coup attempt seeks to determine who knew and did what in the run-up to that fateful day, the process has gotten me thinking about citizenship.

Specifically, what it takes to become a citizen of the United States, and what is expected of someone seeking to become one — especially in contrast to what is expected of those born here.

For even as self-proclaimed patriots betrayed the national principles by seeking to overthrow a democratically decided election, hundreds of thousands would love to make this place their home, at least in part for the very democracy the insurrectionists would smash to pieces.

Ironically, the ones who try and come are condemned by these same “patriots” for breaking the nation’s laws when they come undocumented.

As if the law carries any real weight with people who seek to overturn elections by mob rule.

Interestingly, even for those who come in a much slower and purely legal way, America asks more of them and is far more suspicious of them than we are of our own, no matter how those born-and-bred Americans actually behave.

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Published in GEN

A former publication from Medium about politics, power, and culture. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Tim Wise
Tim Wise

Written by Tim Wise

Anti-racism educator and author of 9 books, including White Like Me and, most recently, Dispatches from the Race War (City Lights, December 2020)