

His rhetoric has prompted comparisons to the Nazis.

By Dr. Shannon Bow O’Brien
Associate Professor of Instruction
The University of Texas at Austin
Introduction
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has repeatedly denouncedย immigrants who enter the U.S. illegallyย and the danger he says that poor immigrants of color pose for the U.S. โ often using hateful language to make his point.
In early October 2024, Trump took his comments a step further when he questioned immigrantsโ faulty genes, saying without support that โMany of them murdered far more than one person, and they are now happily living in the United States. You know, now a murderer, I believe this, itโs in their genes. And we got a lot of bad genes in our country right now.โ
It was far from the first time Trump has invoked eugenics โ aย false, racist theoryย that some people, and even some races, are genetically superior to others.
In 1988, for example, Trump told Oprah Winfrey during an interview: โYou have to beย born lucky in the senseย that you have to have the right genes.โ
In 2016, Trump said that his German roots are theย reason behind his greatness:
โI always said that winning is somewhat, maybe, innate. Maybe itโs just something you have; you have the winning gene. Frankly it would be wonderful if you could develop it, but Iโm not so sure you can. You know, Iโm proud to have that German blood, thereโs no question about it. Great stuff.โ
And in 2020, Trump againย alluded to his belief that bloodlines conveyย excellence:
โI had an uncle who went to MIT who is a top professor. Dr. John Trump. A genius. Itโs in my blood. Iโm smart.โ
Trumpโsย repeatedย and countless commentsย about white peopleโs racial superiority to people of color have promptedย some comparisons to the Nazisย and their ideology of racial superiority.
The Nazis are indeed the most infamous believers of the false idea that white, blue-eyed, blonde-haired people were superior to others โ and that the human population should be selectively managed to breed white people.
But the Nazis didnโt originate these ideas. In fact, the Nazis were so impressed with many American eugenic ideas that theyย incorporated them intoย their racist,ย antisemitic laws.
Root of Eugenics
The British scientist Francis Galton, a cousin of the evolutionist Charles Darwin, first developed theย theory of eugenicsย in the 1860s, and it gained a foothold in the U.S. and Britain around this time.
Eugenics sets racial identity, and especially white identity, as theย most desirable and worthy.
By the dawn of the early 1900s, much of the American eugenics scholarship looked down on American immigrants from any place other than Scandinavia, thus coining the term โNordicism.โ
In the late 19th and early 20th century, immigration to the U.S. was at its peak. In 1890, 14.8% of people living in the U.S. were immigrants. Many people felt concerned about immigration in the U.S., and there were many prominent eugenicists in America. Two of the most famous wereย Madison Grantย andย Lothrop Stoddard.
Both were avowed white supremacists who advocated for scientific racism. They wrote popular and widely read books that helped shape American and German law in the 1920s and 1930s.
Grant, Stoddard and other theorists in the U.S. embraced eugenics as a way to justify racial segregation, restrict immigration, enforce sterilization and uphold other systemic inequalities.
Stoddard attacked the United Statesโ immigration policies in his 1920 book, โThe Rising Tide of Color: The Threat Against White World-Supremacy.โ He wrote: โIf the present drift is not changed, we whites are all ultimately doomed. โฆ We now know that men are not, and never will be equal. We now know that environment and education can only develop what heredity brings.โ
Another prominent eugenicist wasย Harry H. Laughlin, an educator and superintendent of the Eugenics Record Office, a now-defunct research group that gathered biological and social information about the American population.
Laughlin wrote an influential 1922 book, โEugenical Sterilization in the United States,โ which included a chapter on model sterilization laws.ย The Third Reich used his book and lawsย as a template when implementing them in Germany during the height of the Nazi period.
Laughlin also regularlyย testified before U.S. Congress, with this 1922 testimony representative of his message to lawmakers: โImmigration is essentially andย fundamentally a racial and biological problem. There are many factors to consider, but, from the standpoint of the future, immigration is primarily a long time national investment in human family stocks.โ
Eugenicists, including Laughlin, have long been specifically preoccupied with Norwegian genetics โ believing that America is under attack when immigration occurs from non-Nordic countries.
In November 1922, Laughlin said, โSome of our finest andย most desirable immigrants are from Norway.โ
In 1924, Congress approved theย Immigration Act, which severely limited immigration to the U.S., established quotas for immigrants based on nationality and barred immigrants from Asia.
It was only following the end of World War II and the Holocaust that eugenics fell out of favor and lost its prominence in American thinking.
Trump’s Recycling of History
Fears over foreign immigrants weakening the U.S. were popular a century ago, and Trump and many of his followers still embrace them today.
Trump has promised that he will carry out mass deportations of immigrants living in the U.S. illegally, forcibly detaining immigrants in camps and removing 1 million people a year.
In April 2024, Trump used dehumanizing language to express his apparent belief that immigrants are unworthy of empathy. โThe Democrats say, โPlease donโt call them animals. Theyโre humans.โ I said, โNo, theyโre not humans, theyโre not humans, theyโre animals.โโ
Trump has also promoted eugenicistsโ obsession with Scandinavia and the superiority of white people.
In 2018, Trump spoke about immigrants from Haiti, El Salvador and Africa, saying โWhy are we having all these people from shithole countries come here?โ
In the same meeting, Trump also reportedly suggested that the U.S. should instead draw in more people from countries like Norway.
In April 2024, Trump again embraced this idea of Scandinavian superiority, saying that he wants immigrants from โNice countries. You know, like Denmark, Switzerland? Do we have any people coming in from Denmark? How about Switzerland? How about Norway?โ
A Dangerous Flash to the Past
A person running for president in 1924 would seem more likely than a candidate in 2024 to espouse this now-discredited point of view.
President Calvin Coolidgeย ran for election on an โAmerica Firstโ platform in 1924, with the slogan only falling out of favor after groups like the Ku Klux Klan embraced itย around the same time.
The idea of America First, at the time, denoted American nationalism and exceptionalism โ but also was linked to anti-immigration and fascist movements.
When Coolidge signed the heavily restrictiveย 1924 Immigration Act into lawย he stated, โAmerica must remain American.โ
One hundred years later, Trump calls to mind an America First mentality, including when he regularly reads the lyrics to a song called โThe Snakeโ during his rallies as a way to explain the dangers of welcoming immigrants into the U.S. The civil rights activist Oscar Brown wrote this poem in 1963, and his family has said that Trump misinterprets the songโs words.
โI saved you,โ cried that woman.
โAnd youโve bit me even, whyโ
โYou know your bite is poisonous and now Iโm going to die.โ
โOh shut up, silly woman,โ said the reptile with a grin,
โYou knew damn well I was a snake before you took me in.โ
Originally published by The Conversation, 10.29.2024, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution/No derivatives license.


