"I don't care what country they're from, they should respect (something or other)."
When white people even so much as insinuate that I'm from a different country, it turns me off to this "great" US of A. Before you said what you said, I was ready to go work my ass off and donate half my lifetime's wages to the government, get my ass blown off in a war for this place. But now...?
When you assume I'm from some place else, you do yourself a disservice. I was in fact born here, raised here, and haven't left the country in over a decade. Sure, my family came from elsewhere, but with the exception of the oppressed indigenous population, whose didn't? The implication you make by dismissing the one possibility that in truth is actuality is that I'm not "from" here, and I'm not welcome. In that sense of unwelcome, my contributions have been discarded.
We, as a demographic, have contributed, are contributing, and will contribute (if you'll have us). I dare you to refuse to let us contribute; take away our contributions, I guarantee this country will be lesser for it. It is because we are invested in helping this nation work that it hurts to be judged by our appearances. What is it about my eyes and complexion that makes me automatically less socially or culturally legitimate as an American?
Perhaps your concept of "American" is too small, your narrative to narrow to incorporate ours, your hypocritical lies to weak to bear the weight of our existence. That's how you do disservice to yourself by judging. By closing yourself to what else "American" might possibly mean, you limit the strengths other traditions might contribute, outside of your own European heritage. Believe it or not, the "American" perspective of culture has its blind spots, of which we are discussing one. By closing yourself to full acceptance of people of other colors and cultures, you undermine the very ideals you claim to champion.
What happens in the aftermath of racism is that those at whom the racism is directed at feel rejected. Feeling rejected actually does make some of us disengage a bit. Your racism does, in some cases, create a self-fulfilling prophecy. If enough people disengage from a belief in the American nation, the scores of years this house has left to stand will be limited. Racism causes our will to fracture, our unity to unravel.
I dare you to win me and people as disillusioned as myself back over, white America; allow yourself to be joined by others' Americas. If you love America, accept us as your own.
What happens in the aftermath of racism is that those at whom the racism is directed at feel rejected. Feeling rejected actually does make some of us disengage a bit. Your racism does, in some cases, create a self-fulfilling prophecy. If enough people disengage from a belief in the American nation, the scores of years this house has left to stand will be limited. Racism causes our will to fracture, our unity to unravel.
I dare you to win me and people as disillusioned as myself back over, white America; allow yourself to be joined by others' Americas. If you love America, accept us as your own.