The people involved in the thus-far minor violence in Los Angeles no doubt have many motives. Trump wants to appear tough, and he may, as some critics say, be looking to stoke violence to justify the seizure of more power. The people fighting him may be opposing that power grab, or ICE's inhumanity to immigrants, or the myth of immigrant crime, and many other things. I am not trying to judge them or sort out the strains of their various pains and angers.
I want to take a view from a gondola high above the fray.
From on high, I see America's confusion about immigration playing out in random squabbles on the street.
Americans as a group have a ridiculously two-faced attitude toward immigrants. Every poll I have ever seen shows that a majority wants less immigration. But everywhere I look I see an American that depends absolutely on immigrants, and one without any appetite for the measures that would really reduce the flow.
We need immigrants as workers. There are about 48 million immmigrants in the US, 15 percent of the population. The rate of employment is higher among immigrants than for the native born; at least 30 million of the roughly 163 million jobs in the US are held by immigrants. What would happen if they disappeared? The number of illegal immigrants is around 11 million, and the percentage of those who are working is even higher than for legal immigrants; big sectors of the American economy, especially agriculture and construction, would collapse without their help. "They take our jobs" is a ridiculous thing to say in a country with an unemployment rate below 4 percent. Back in 2017 Trump's own chief of staff said that we needed more immigrants, because America's businesses were "desperate" for more workers.
We depend on immigrants fiscally. If there is any hope of sustaining Medicare and Social Security for fifty more years it rests solely on immigrants. Unless we are willing to tax ourselves a lot more rigorously, we need a growing population to keep the system solvent. Since the native born are not even reproducing themselves these days, that means immigrants. Illegal immigrants are a particular boon here, since many of them pay into Social Security through fraudulent accounts but will not be able to get any money out.
Immigrants have made our food vastly better and more interesting. They make our cities more vibrant. They have saved hundreds of small towns that would otherwise have disappeared. They work harder than the native born, study harder in school, found more companies, win more Nobel prizes.
And yet people say they hate it. Every poll says so, and among some the feelings are very strong. Some of the rage against immigrants I have seen on Twitter/X shocks me, and I am pretty hard to shock.
So what are we doing about it? Not much. If we were serious about limiting border crossings, we would prosecute the people who hire migrants. But the people who hire them are businessmen in agriculture, construction, trucking, warehousing, and so on, so that never happens. I refer to the curious the Rudy Texeira's wonderful article about "border theater" in Texas, in which the Republican governor stages events like sending busloads of migrants to New York City while reassuring his big business supporters that nothing will happen to the workers they depend on.
What is happening is Los Angeles is what you get when people who are vital to our economy and living out an old American dream are also violating the law in a way that makes millions of Americans very angry. The confusion in the streets mirrors the confusion in our politics, our economics, and our souls.
As Trump has pretty much admitted, ICE raids will never by themselves have a meaningful impact on illegal immigration. The strategy is to scare people into "self deporting." But what if they don't? What if, instead, they start pushing back? Trump's strategy so far is to escalate, to deploy ever greater force. But is the country really ready for that?
Calling out the National Guard may help when you're dealing with a riot that happens to be concentrated in one place, but it is a lousy strategy for dealing with millions of people who have homes and jobs and just keep their heads down. Again, the best strategy would be to go after employers, and since that will never happen, here we are.
I have no idea where this will take us. Anger against immigrants is real, and looking around the world I see that immigration drives awful politics pretty much everywhere. But will we really opt to become a shrinking, declining nation, throwing away much of our energy and creativity in favor of bland mediocrity?
If people understood that this was the choice, what would they do?
Beats me. But I feel certain that these LA troubles are not the end of our immigration chaos, and I suspect that things may well got a lot worse in some places. Our policies here are fundamentally confused, because the things we want are in conflict with each other. People want to feel at home in a familiar place, but they also want to live in a wealthy and vibrant world. I do not know how to do both, and I not think anyone else does, either.
So, riots.