I have a memory of reading, sometime in the 1980s, a story in a French magazine about the American border patrol along the Mexican border. They don’t use police dogs, the reporter explained approvingly, “because of a certain idea of the rights of man.” I have tried to trace this story, but alas, to no avail.
Whether the details of my memory are exact or not, I believe that, in general, and for a long time, many of those in the world who were critical of the American ideals and way of life, or even thought of themselves as anti-American, still had much respect and even admiration for the country and its traditions. Many secretly regretted not being American.
How this has changed! Just consider the experience of the South Korean personnel who were the victims of a police raid at an LG-Hyundai plant in Georgia. They were arrested, shackled, and jailed for one week until they were released and allowed to return to their country. The Wall Street Journal reports on the wife of an engineer arrested there (“Confusion, Anger, Relief: Korean Engineer Tells of Week in U.S. ICE Detention,” September 12, 2025):
Lee said she was heartbroken to hear her husband, an LG Energy employee, was in shackles. “Treating him like a felon—it made me so angry,” she said.
The husband was among the 330 workers who, last Friday, landed near Seoul on a flight chartered by the South Korean government. His wife, who waited for him at the airport, emotionally declared:
I don’t want him to go back there.
“There” is America. A report by the Financial Times is even more damning (“South Korea Denounces ‘Shocking’ US Treatment of Detained Workers,” September 12, 2025):
The workers’ flight was delayed on Wednesday after President Donald Trump made them a last-minute offer to remain in the US. But only one elected to stay, with many who returned to Korea vowing never to return to America. …
Business groups and South Korean officials have admitted that Korean companies often used unsuitable visas for workers sent to the US to build multibillion-dollar advanced plants. But they insist Washington left them in an “impossible position” by refusing to facilitate short-term working visas that would allow projects to be completed on time.
Another returning worker said that “we should have followed the rules properly”. Seoul should negotiate the visa issue with Washington, the worker said, but added that “I don’t want to go back to the US”.
Just a few days ago, I found, on the website of a foreign university in a Western country, a list of countries with high cybersecurity risks, requiring faculty traveling there to borrow a specially configured device from the university. The countries listed (in this order):
- United States
- China
- Russia
- Iran
- India
- North Korea
I suspect that, lurking under this list, there is still some anti-américanisme primaire (“crude anti-Americanism”) as we (well, some of us) used to say in French.* Perhaps many would now have some reason not to laugh at the list. American border agents have the power to inspect electronic devices at ports of entry.
America is going through dangerous times. Those who love her most should be the most worried.
——
* In 1984, Georges Suffert, Deputy Editor-in-Chief of the magazine Le Point in Paris, published his book Les nouveaux cow-boys. Essai sur l’anti-américanisme primaire (The New Cowboys: Essay on Crude Anti-Americanism). At Le Point, he was a colleague of Maurice Roy, another Deputy Editor-in-Chief and also economics editor, who had published Vive le Capitalisme! (Long Live Capitalism!) a few years earlier. I was honored to count Roy among my friends. In France as in America, we seem to be living in another geological epoch.
READER COMMENTS
Craig
Sep 18 2025 at 10:55am
“How this has changed! Just consider the experience of the South Korean personnel who were the victims of a police raid at an LG-Hyundai plant in Georgia.”
They didn’t have immigration raids in the 1980s? My point though is that if this is one reason many have a poor opinion of America, whereas before they didn’t, its not a change actually, we just live in an era with the internet and a 24 hour news cycle. If its 1986 you may have read a blurb about this on page 4 in the NY Times or the story would gotten a minute from ABC News or something.
Craig
Sep 18 2025 at 11:06am
“anti-américanisme primaire” <– great phrase. I have often thought that if one scratches the surface of a European one will likely find an anti-American to some degree, perhaps before the world got smaller there was still more of a mystique, but I must say that a major aspect of the reason I want #outofnato is that, yes, I sense the contempt, I sense a lack of shared values and I really question why I should want the US to be in NATO? Trump is in UK, there are protests as there were before in his first time, which, while its their right to protest, its my right to question the proportionality given that’s not something Americans would really do with respect to European leaders. Indeed I would suggest the internet is such that ‘familiarity breeds contempt’? After all Americans are fat and stupid and Europeans are lazy leftist kooks, right?
steve
Sep 18 2025 at 1:51pm
We didnt have immigration raids in the 80s like we do now. The agents didnt wear masks and they showed ID. They didnt put people in shackles for being a week overdue on their visa. The US had a reputation of (mostly) providing due process and not engaging in performative cruelty. In the past, if there was a discrepancy on your visa you might get sent to your consulate to straighten out an error or sent back to your home country. Now you can be held for weeks, sleeping on cold cement floors and no medical attention for what amounts to a clerical error. It really is different now.
I am retired now but I was working during Trump’s first term and I know we were always scared about making an error with one of our H1B people. Talking with my replacement that fear is worse now.
Steve
Warren Platts
Sep 19 2025 at 4:13am
This is nothing new. At least we’re not anywhere near the anti-Chinese massacres out west in the 1880s. Not to mention the Japanese internment camps of the 1940s.
Jose Pablo
Sep 19 2025 at 6:23am
You’re absolutely right, Craig! With Trump it’s nothing more than business as usual.
In the same line that you point out, I’ve also come to realize that these days, war is peace, freedom is slavery, and ignorance is strength
Craig
Sep 19 2025 at 9:57am
‘If its 1986″ <– from my comment above realizing now I should’ve said 1984! Missed a golden opportunity on that one JP
TMC
Sep 18 2025 at 11:26am
I’m visiting Germany soon, so a friend gave me the ‘tell them you’re Canadian’ half joke.
I told him Germany, the EU in general, and even Canada are way more screwed up than the US. No way I’m claiming any of them.
David Seltzer
Sep 18 2025 at 7:01pm
It starts at the top. Tariffs! Mindless domestic terror organization designations. Fire Lisa Cook. Summary execution of 14 alleged drug smugglers at sea without due process. Capricious, Unilateral use of enormous presidential power. I’m alarmed by petulant authoritarianism. Just sayin’ folks.
Pierre Lemieux
Sep 19 2025 at 1:12pm
David: Yes, and so on, and so forth.
José Pablo
Sep 19 2025 at 6:35am
The Koreans are right: the U.S. visa system is utterly useless for anyone trying to properly develop a business project here.
It’s an administrative absurdity—practically a useless dream conjured by a bureaucratic mind.
But then again, designed and managed by government, what else could it possibly be?
The whole system serves only as a hollow excuse, a display of false piety meant to comfort the mindless nationalist haters—of which, as it turns out, there are plenty.
Thomas L Hutcheson
Sep 19 2025 at 11:48pm
The worries started with the Again in MAGA. I did not want a president or movement that did not love its own country.
José Pablo
Sep 23 2025 at 9:16am
I don’t see “being your own country” as a rationally valid reason to love a nation.
Should North Koreans love their country? Should Russians? Iranians?
It may be useful to instill that bias in the hearts of soldiers, but it seems entirely misplaced in the minds of thinkers.
There are, of course, many reasons to be proud of America—and many reasons to be ashamed of it as well.
But “America being your own country” is not, in itself, an intellectually valid reason for pride.
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