How decades of interventionist policies created the very instability now used to justify exclusion
The Pattern Repeats
From Somalia to Venezuela, Haiti to Afghanistan, a familiar tragedy unfolds: Western nations destabilize countries through economic warfare, military intervention, and political meddling, then express shock when refugees arrive at their borders—only to label their home countries as “shitholes” and the refugees themselves as undesirable.
President Trump’s recent comments about Somali immigrants exemplify this cruel hypocrisy. Somalia didn’t become a “hellhole” in a vacuum. The country’s current struggles are inseparable from decades of foreign interference, from Cold War proxy battles to the 1993 “Black Hawk Down” incident to ongoing drone strikes that continue to claim civilian lives.
Venezuela: A Case Study in Manufactured Crisis
Consider Venezuela—a nation sitting on the world’s largest oil reserves, now suffering under crushing sanctions that have killed an estimated 40,000 people according to former UN Special Rapporteur Alfred de Zayas. When the U.S. and EU recognize unelected opposition figures as legitimate leaders while simultaneously strangling Venezuela’s economy, they’re not promoting democracy—they’re orchestrating regime change through collective punishment.
Then, when Venezuelans flee the very economic collapse these policies helped create, they’re met with detention centers and deportation flights, their country dismissed as a “failed state” rather than a nation under siege.
The Somali Reality
Somalia’s chaos isn’t organic either. After the Siad Barre regime—once a Cold War ally—collapsed in 1991, the international community largely abandoned Somalia while continuing to arm various factions. The U.S.-backed Ethiopian invasion of 2006 further destabilized the country, strengthening the very extremist groups it claimed to combat.
Today, when Somali refugees seek safety in America, they’re fleeing a situation that Western policies helped create—only to hear their homeland described as “filthy” and “disgusting” by the leader of the nation that claims to offer refuge.
Haiti’s Endless Punishment
Haiti’s story is perhaps most damning. After the first successful slave rebellion created the hemisphere’s first Black republic, France forced Haiti to pay “reparations” to slaveholders—150 million francs that took 122 years to pay off. When Haiti finally elected Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who demanded France return this stolen wealth, the U.S. helped orchestrate his removal in 2004.
Now, as Haitians flee gang violence in a country where democratic institutions have been systematically undermined, they’re met with mass deportations and derision about coming from a “shithole country.”
The Congressional Silence
Where is Congress while the President openly disparages entire nations and their people? Where are the hearings on how U.S. foreign policy contributes to refugee crises? Where is the accountability for sanctions that starve children while politicians boast about “maximum pressure”?
The silence is deafening because both parties are complicit. Democrats might use politer language, but they continue the same interventionist policies—from Obama’s coup in Honduras to Biden’s continuation of Trump’s Venezuela sanctions.
A Call for Global Solidarity
Every community—whether Somali-American, Venezuelan-American, or any group that understands oppression—must recognize that refugee crises aren’t random acts of nature. They’re the predictable results of empire, and the victims deserve our support, not our scorn.
Congress must step up with:
- Hearings on how foreign interventions and sanctions create refugee flows
- Legislation requiring impact assessments before any economic warfare is waged
- An end to recognizing unelected opposition figures in sanctioned countries
- Protection for refugees fleeing situations U.S. policies helped create
The Moral Bankruptcy
There’s something particularly grotesque about destroying a country’s ability to function, then mocking its dysfunction. About backing coups and sanctions, then wondering why people flee. About bombing nations while calling their citizens “terrorists” when they seek safety.
The “shithole countries” comment isn’t just racist—it’s the confession of a bully who punches someone in the face and then mocks them for bleeding.
Conclusion: The Real Threat
The real threat to American values isn’t refugees from countries we’ve helped destroy—it’s the politicians and policies that destroy them in the first place. Until we confront how our government creates the very instability it later uses to justify exclusion, we’ll remain trapped in this cycle of destruction and dehumanization.
Every community that knows what it’s like to be targeted must stand together. Somali-Americans, Venezuelan-Americans, Haitian-Americans, Afghan-Americans—these aren’t separate struggles but one fight against an empire that destroys abroad and discriminates at home.
The president should represent all Americans, including those who came from the very nations he’s demonizing. And if Congress won’t hold him accountable for turning refugee crises he helped create into political weapons, then it’s up to every community—immigrant and native-born alike—to demand better.
Because a nation that bombs, sanctions, and destabilizes other countries while calling their refugees undesirable isn’t just hypocritical—it’s morally bankrupt. And moral bankruptcy, unlike the countries it maligns, truly threatens to make America a “shithole” of its own making.
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