Anti-Immigrant Groups Continue To Play Major Role in Dallas Earth Day Event, Prompting Boycott by Sierra Club
The Austin chapter of the Sierra Club has听听of this week鈥檚 Austin Earth Day event citing the presence of anti-immigrant groups at the upcoming Dallas Earth Day event, the largest in the world.
鈥淲e cannot, in good conscience, support an event nor its main funder if it encourages anti-immigrant and racist sentiments,鈥澨鼳ustin鈥檚 Sierra Club chair Damien Brockman told the Austin American-Statesman.
The three anti-immigrant groups participating in the Dallas Earth Day event 鈥撯 the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), NumbersUSA and (PFIR) 鈥撯 are three key cogs in the broader anti-immigrant movement. The Austin chapter听raised their concerns to the organizers of the Dallas听event over a year ago to no avail, prompting their decision.听
FAIR leaders have ties to white supremacist groups and eugenicists and have made many racist statements. Its founder, white nationalist John Tanton, has expressed a wish that America remain a majority-white population: a goal to be achieved by limiting the number of non-whites who enter the country.听Longtime FAIR president, Dan Stein, told the Wall Street Journal in 1997, "Should we be subsidizing people with low IQs to have as many children as possible, and not subsidizing those with high ones?"
NumbersUSA serves as the anti-immigrant movement鈥檚 grassroots mobilization group. Founded by Roy Beck, a Tanton disciple, NumbersUSA also has a history steeped in racism. Beck has twice addressed the white nationalist听Council of Conservative Citizens (CCC), the group Charleston shooter Dylann Roof cited听as his gateway into the white nationalist world. The CCC has referred to African-Americans as a 鈥渞etrograde species of humanity,鈥 and NumbersUSA featured white nationalist Roan Garcia-Quintana, a CCC board member, in two videos on immigration produced in the late 2000鈥檚.
PFIR, one of the anti-immigrant movement鈥檚 鈥渇ront groups鈥 started with the help of the bigger organizations including NumbersUSA,听attempts to lend a veneer of legitimacy to the movement by arguing that 鈥減rogressives鈥 are in opposition to immigration reform.
Leah Durant, PFIR鈥檚 executive director, gave an interview in 2009 to Peter Gemma, a white nationalist writing for the Social Contract Press (TSCP). Apart from his role leading a racist tabloid听for the CCC, Gemma is part of the American Holocaust denial movement, reviewing a book by for the racist journal, organizing a 2005 speaking event for Irving, and giving a speech at the听. Gemma has been photographed with Leah Durant and another anti-Semite, Wayne Lutton at anti-immigrant events.
Real estate magnate Trammell S. Crow, is the founder of the Dallas event and chief patron of the smaller Austin event听is also听a good friend of the anti-immigrant movement. In 2012, the Dallas Morning News that Crow had donated a whopping $500,000 to help cover the costs of legal fees to defend an in the town of Farmers Branch, a suburb of Dallas.
So why are three anti-immigrant groups with long, racist histories participating in the largest Earth Day event in the world? The answer lies in a key tactic used by the anti-immigrant movement, something called 鈥greenwashing.鈥
Greenwashing is an attempt by immigration opponents to convince environmentalists that they, too, must oppose immigration if they are to save the environment from the ravages of听population growth.听Many of the anti-immigrant movement鈥檚 founders, including听Tanton, considered themselves environmentalists. (Tanton, for one, was very active in the Sierra Club before he turned to nativism.)
The Sierra Club also has a history of battling with the anti-immigrant movement. In 1998, following the Club鈥檚 decision to take a neutral stance on the issue of immigration, a number of anti-immigrant activists attempted a hostile takeover of the organization鈥檚 national board. In 2004, nativists mounted a more serious effort to take over the Sierra Club's board of directors, an attempt that was beaten back only after a strenuous campaign by club members and groups including the Southern Poverty Law Center.
The three anti-immigrant activists who ran unsuccessfully for the Sierra Club board in 2004 鈥 Dick Lamm, former Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Executive Director Frank Morris and Cornell University entomology professor David Pimentel 鈥 joined PFIR's board when it formed in 2009. The attempt was a classic case of "greenwashing" 鈥 a cynical effort by nativist activists to seduce environmentalists to join their cause for purely strategic reasons.
The Austin chapter of the Sierra Club鈥檚 move to pull out of the Austin Earth Day event is a positive one and should serve as a warning to other environmental groups. The anti-immigrant movement is hell-bent on coaxing environmentalists to join its cause, and events like the Dallas Earth Day are exactly the venue and opportunity they are looking for.听
Editors' Note听(4/21/16): This post has been updated to correct that the event boycotted by the Austin chapter of the Sierra Club is the Austin Earth Day event, not the Dallas Earth Day event.听