[Formerly one of the shining stars of the
Fitchburg State English Studies program, Kathleen Morrissey has moved into the next stages of
her career very impressively: professing
at multiple universities in Massachusetts, publishing on 18th
century travel writing and fiction, and, as evidenced by this great Guest Post,
entering into our public conversations about politics and social justice,
veganism and animal rights, health and fitness, music and pop culture, and much
more. I’m very excited to share the thoughts of this rapidly rising star in my
latest Guest Post!]
The Bubbles and
Borders that Limit Our Immigration Debates
I had a polite conversation in
the kitchen at a child’s birthday party. The people in the room were trying to
avoid the screaming match in the living room between some of the parents. The topic
of discussion was the polemical question: what do we think about immigration?
I covered up the noise with small
talk and chips. However, as a professor of composition and rhetoric, I detected
a trend in their arguments anyway: they screamed about closing the borders,
pointed to specific cases of MS-13 crime, and demanded sources other than “Fake
News” CNN. The phrase, “Where are your sources?”, echoed throughout the
house.
The heated debate just called
attention to an impossible border between the sides. The unsolicited argument
was only effective at making the other party guests feel voiceless. Their
respective media bubbles filtered out opposing views and fed narratives rather
than facts, making discussion futile. It was as if the party was a microcosm of
the country. Before we can even talk about the literal border that delineates
the country, we need to address the rhetorical borders we uphold in our
perspectives that prevent any meaningful communication.
The evidentiary threshold for
facts that challenge a person’s narrative is set impossibly high.
People will only lower the bar for news that suits them.
Fact checking is useless because “Fake News” is now an acceptable charge.
Therefore, it is important to not debate about the facts; it is about what
facts matter.
You have to discern the rhetorical dishonesties instead.
For example, TIME magazine’s famous cover, “Welcome to
America,” became a potent symbol for the ongoing immigration issue of family
separation at the border. TIME recently clarified that the young
girl on the cover was in fact not carried away from her mother by U.S. Border
patrol agents, but stood by the message conveyed in the iconic image. On the
other hand, conservative sites ran
with this image as “Fake News.”
For TIME and those who agree, the particulars of the image are not as
important as the larger idea it symbolizes. The photograph serves as a stand-in
that succinctly captures the despair that many families have and will
experience over something as nominal as documentation status. For
conservatives, the fact that matters is that the photo is staged and therefore
not literally true; the girl is a prop to convey something that she is not a
part of.
In a world of “Fake News,” the
conversation cannot be a flurry of facts from each side. It needs to focus on
the unspoken assumptions behind the use of the facts. While what conservative
sites say may be factual, it is a disturbing method of diverting attention away
from the message of the cover. The cover is only a topic of discussion because
the particulars of family can be used to dismiss the entire issue. It isn’t
enough that the photo was staged. Sites
highlight that the mother left her other children, broke the law, and
wasn’t fleeing crisis. She not only is a bad example of separation; she is
emblematic of everything the right fears about immigrants. In this view, she is
a criminal seeking a backdoor into a better lifestyle, willing to sacrifice her
family. No individual will ever fit a perfect model of immigration, so the
focus will always be on a person’s shortcomings to preserve the status
quo.
Returning to the debate, I
listened to people zoom in on crimes of MS-13 to bloom out to opinions about
thousands of immigrants. This is a typical composition/division
fallacy; make a true claim about one part and characterize the whole. Right
wing pundits say “undocumented immigrant” and “violent gang member” in the same
breath, dangerously eliding the two. It is a limitation of empathy to extend
focus on the victims of MS-13 and to strictly imagine all of the immigrants as
criminals.
Beneath the gestures to gang
violence in defense of border control lies a cold calculation: the lives
affected by MS-13 simply matter more than the countless lives affected by the
stringent immigration policies. The obsession around the transgressions at an
imaginary border is actually an egregious transgression in itself. Their
selection of certain facts occludes the larger humanitarian crisis inflamed by
the immigration policy. Thus, the way we approach arguments with people
entrenched in different media bubbles should be focused on the rhetorical
borders we construct. That way, we can productively talk about the assumptions
that guide the narratives against the basic rights and humanity of undocumented
immigrants.
[Next series starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you think?]
Great post! One question: How do we keep highlighting assumptions in a productive manner? It seems easy for the practice to become either a one-sided delegitimization, a deconstructive Ouroboros, or unhelpful "bothsides"ism.
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