Everett, Wash.

Published: Monday, July 23, 2007

Can't make a sound case? Just lob a verbal grenade

"Nazis."

Lord, can we just give this one a rest?

So help me, if there's a term that's been overworked and overused in public debate of late, that's it.

Worn out is what it is.

The most recent example was a July 15 guest commentary in this newspaper written by Mr. Marc Brenman.

Mr. Brenman is the executive director of the Washington State Human Rights Commission and he held forth for 700 or so words on how truly bad he thinks a group called The Minutemen are.

Fine. That's an opinion. He's entitled to it and, most certainly, is entitled to express it.

But, if he wants me nodding in agreement rather than sputtering into my coffee, then he'll have to tell me precisely why he thinks this group is a bunch of kooks.

I'd like examples and dates. I'd like patterns and proof. Then, with that available, I'll look at their side of the story and make a decision as to whether I believe they're bigots, racists (another overworked term), crackpots or loons. My opinion may or may not be the same as his.

I've reached the end of my tether, however, over the near constant use of the term "Nazis" and I'm going to spend a few words here blowing off steam. That's because such use trivializes what was indeed a monstrous and inhuman movement.

Supposedly, in a nation of laws, breaking one should carry some consequences. That it doesn't, as regards illegal immigration, is appalling not only to me, but also to a majority of other Americans - of all races, religions, beliefs and backgrounds.

More than 12 million people have entered this country illegally, issued a slap in the face to those waiting to do so legally, and have then had the gall to demand preferential treatment as regards their presence here.

Many of us see this as just plain (how to put this delicately?) wrong.

Unfortunately, these days, if you say this loudly or if you (horrors!) fail to genuflect at the altar of "inclusiveness" and "sensitivity," if you're not "welcoming" or don't "celebrate" diversity, then you must be evil and are, most certainly, a Nazi.

Give me a break.

According to Mr. Brenman, "The Minutemen rely on the use of hateful speech, the Big Lie, and fear of people who are different to corrupt and coarsen political dialogue just as their Nazi forbears did."

Really?

Have the Minutemen offered a "Final Solution" to the problem of illegal immigrants? Is it in any way similar to what SS Lt. Gen. Reinhard Heydrich proposed in the Wannsee Protocols?

Have the Minutemen called for the establishment of places like Aushwitz, Bergen-Belsen, Birkenau, Buchenwald, Dachau, Majdanek, Mauthausen, Sobibor or Treblinka?

Have the Minutemen called for the wholesale death of illegal immigrants? Have they called for the killing of mothers and children, fathers and sons, the sick and the old? Have they experimented with various poisonous gases? Have they suggested that "bath houses" be built in close proximity to ovens?

Does the term "Nazi" also apply to those who say that the influx of illegal aliens needs to be stopped immediately, our borders secured, and a hard look be taken at those who are here to determine what would be best for the nation?

Does it apply to those who argue that what our "representatives" in D.C. have allowed to happen is both disgraceful and outrageous?

Didn't think so.

The real Nazis designed and implemented a solution to their "problem" that was loathsome and horrific. That is what they were about. That term, therefore, should be reserved to describe movements or groups equaling them in evil and not be bandied about casually. As a history major, Mr. Brenman should know this.

Finally, in reading and rereading Mr. Brenman's piece, I noticed an interesting point.

Although he'd trotted out a host of bromides and quotations regarding our immigrant past, he never once used the adjective "illegal" to describe the current situation.

His studied avoidance of that one, very accurate term was akin to trying to ignore the proverbial 800-pound gorilla in the room.

And what this did was make his entire commentary sound like nothing more than a large serving of Pecksniffian twaddle.

Larry Simoneaux lives in Edmonds. Comments can be sent to larrysim@att.net.

© 2009The Daily Herald Co., Everett, WA