Trump vs. an America that works By Jennifer Rubin February 24 at 5:27 PM In his column Friday taking to task President Trump and other immigration exclusionists, David Brooks writes: “For the life of me, I can’t figure out why so many Republicans prefer a dying white America to a place like, say, Houston.”

By that we take it to mean that Trump glorifies the Rust Belt and rural America, the causalities in globalization and automation, but paints U.S. cities as dangerous.

Trump’s policies in many cases seeks to wreak havoc (e.g., staging immigration raids, threatening city funding). His immigration raids are already causing economic disruption in construction and food service industries. Well, Brooks answers the question for himself: Put differently, Houston and other vibrant mid- and large-size cities, especially those in the Sun Belt, are a repudiation of Trump’s notions that we must keep foreigners out; “liberal elites” are unconcerned with the little guy; we’ve been “losing” at globalization; and that only he can “bring the jobs back.” … On one level, this is hardly surprising since Trump’s message is aimed at Americans who are resentful, feel left behind and are both physically and culturally marginalized. The flip side of this, however, is that Trump either ignores or vilifies urban America

And, moreover, the presence of vibrant cities not just on the coasts but also in the heartland suggests Trump’s base would greatly benefit by moving from dead and dying Rust Belt towns to more economically vibrant places.

Some of that has already gone on as the population has shifted from the Northeast and upper Midwest to the South and West, but it seems we should not be filling Trump voters with the false hope that coal jobs are coming back, but rather encourage them to be like immigrants — go to where the work is.

Trump fails to understand that immigrants go to places that have work, or at least work better than what they left.

Every immigrant who comes is a vote of confidence in America, a bet that there is economic prosperity available at the end of the journey. The same immigrant mentality should be encouraged among native-born Americans.

From the Washington Post: Instead of letting the phrase fade into obscurity, the neocons are doubling down on “dying white America.” That’s what you get for electing as President some small town Rust Belter like Trump. He’s from Marion, Indiana, right? What does Trump know about city living? Has he ever been more than two stories off the ground in his whole backwoods life? You know, when I was at Rice U. in Houston from 1976-1980, the city was a magnet for Americans looking for work. Now it’s a magnet for foreigners. But, funny, it turns out that immigrants have already gotten to Houston. And immediately bid down pay so that it’s not worthwhile for an American to move there. But, of course, we shouldn’t encourage Americans to migrate internally by paying them more. Houston’s employers, such as ExxonMobil, aren’t made out of money, people! Even more fundamentally, offering Americans higher pay corrupts the purity of the economic process.

Why are American workers so mercenary? Immigrants aren’t materialistic. They don’t care about making an extra $5 per hour, they care about getting Green Cards for their entire clan or subcaste. Those are family values, folks, something you greedy, worthless American losers don’t know about.

Instead, we should encourage Americans by repeatedly telling them that they are evil losers and that foreigners are the Real Americans.

In sum, rather than leave Americans in Rust Belt isolation, with a shriveled job market, it makes sense to encourage and assist them to move to productive areas of the country, which in many cases means a more urban environment. There they might learn that immigrants aren’t out to steal their jobs or murder their kids. And they might find themselves reconnecting to their fellow Americans.

Of course, most of their fellow Americans haven’t even moved to America yet. But they will, they will!

[Comment at Unz.com]