I worked in the White House. The World Cup has exposed the great lie of Trump's America
Karine Jean-Pierre
The World Cup is built on the idea that anyone can belong anywhere for a moment. You see it in the crowds that cross borders without fear, in the families who travel thousands of miles to watch a match, and in the way cities transform into temporary homes for people from every corner of the world. Yet watching from America, that freedom feels distant. Here, movement is something you measure, calculate and sometimes avoid. Visa denials, immigration enforcement and racialized policing turn the simple act of going somewhere into a negotiation with risk.
I worked for two US presidents, Joe Biden and Barack Obama, and that experience taught me how national systems are meant to protect people. Watching this World Cup has made it impossible to ignore how unsafe America has become for many communities under the Trump administration. The contrast between global ease and domestic insecurity is unmistakable.
For several weeks, I have seen a statement circulating across social media. It reads: The World Cup is proof that, if it were not for our leaders, the vast majority of people around the world would get along just fine. The sentiment is simplified, and the reality is far more complex, shaped by history, politics, and power. Yet it captures something real about this moment. It reflects the sense that ordinary people, when given the chance, can share space, joy, and belonging without fear. The tournament showed how easily connection can happen when it is not mediated by borders, surveillance or political agendas. It also revealed how sharply that experience contrasts with life in America, where safety is conditional and where the systems that govern movement and belonging often make people feel less rather than more secure.
That insecurity touches many communities. It affects citizens, immigrants, undocumented people, and people with legal status who have complied with every requirement placed upon them. During these weeks of the World Cup, Haiti happened to have a rare prominence. As a Haitian American, I can speak to what that visibility meant. Haitis qualification after more than half a century was a moment of pride for the diaspora, a chance to be seen globally in a way that was not defined by crisis. Yet even in that joy, the realities of life in America were impossible to ignore. Haitian immigrants, like many others, navigate restricted movement, heightened surveillance, and the constant awareness that their safety depends on political decisions entirely outside their control.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/i-worked-in-the-white-house-the-world-cup-has-exposed-the-great-lie-of-trump-s-america/ar-AA286D5G
31j20b3
(351 posts)Mobility is a huge part of American life. It's now unusual to live in one state for your life.
Military service, education, search for upward-mobility and recovery from upward flameouts depends on movement.
In the 12 states I lived in I also lived at 16 different addresses, trying to make the money go as far as possible. Again, movement in American life is pretty much required though maybe I'm on the extreme of that.
I don't want to live that over again.
DownriverDem
(7,052 posts)and has been my whole life.
littlemissmartypants
(36,233 posts)From her piece...
Lonestarblue
(13,697 posts)Skin color or gender do not determine intelligence, integrity, compassion, tolerance, or honesty, characteristics mostly missing in those in the white supremacist, patriarchal MAGA cult. MAGA America is mot welcoming. It is a place seeking to hurt and dominate thanks to an ignorant, evil narcissist who cares for no one but himself.