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Why ‘monstrify'? Look at who benefits when few are considered fully human

Why ‘monstrify'? Look at who benefits when few are considered fully human

In March, the Trump administration deported 238 Venezuelans to El Salvador, allegedly for membership in the criminal organization Tren de Aragua. According to White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, these men were 'terrorists' and 'heinous monsters.' President Trump echoed her, calling them 'monsters' on his social media platform, Truth Social. In May, ProPublica reported that the White House knew that most of the men had no criminal convictions in the U.S., and earlier reporting indicated that more than 50 of them had entered the U.S. legally and had not violated immigration law.
'Monster' conjures a threat distinct from 'foreign,' 'different,' 'other' or even 'alien.' Here it implies that the deportees are different from 'normal' people (read 'white, Anglo, native-born Americans') in ways that go beyond merely committing a garden-variety crime. Their transgression of the social contract seemingly even exceeds the violent crimes of which they are accused, because U.S. citizens suspected of being 'rapists, murders, kidnappers' — the administration's allegations about these 'monsters' — don't get trafficked to gulags overseas.
Monstrifying these people was part of a strategy to justify deporting them by invoking the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 without proof of any crime or gang membership. By doing so the administration threatens to normalize not just the deportation of a handful of individuals but also depriving all residents (legal and undocumented) and U.S. citizens of the right to challenge the legality of their detention or imprisonment. Because one cannot prove legal residence or citizenship without due process, deporting people without legal proceedings is to deny rights that must be extended to all if they are to exist for anyone — a violation all the greater when individuals are sent to a prison from which, in the words of the Salvadoran president, 'the only way out is in a coffin.'
Monstrifying individuals and groups is nothing new. The 11th-century chronicler Gerald of Wales, descended from Norman conquerers and Welsh nobility, dismissed the English as 'the most worthless of all peoples under heaven … the most abject slaves' and Ireland as an island inhabited by werewolves, ox-humans and other human-animal hybrids. In 1625, an English Puritan travel editor published a claim (without having set foot in North America) that the Algonquians had 'little of humanitie but shape … more brutish than the beasts they hunt.'
In 1558, the Scottish Protestant and firebrand preacher John Knox published a pamphlet against the rule of Mary I of England, arguing that a woman who ruled in her own right was 'a monster of monsters,' her country a monstrous body politic, unlikely to survive for long. In the age of Atlantic slavery, legal instruments known as 'black codes' invented Black Africans transported to the colonies as a new category: the chattel slave who served for life and had fewer rights than white Christian servants.
The current president's history of monstrifying people extends to U.S. citizens. In August 2016, Trump called Hillary Clinton 'a monster': supposedly 'weak,' 'unhinged,' 'unbalanced,' someone who would be 'a disaster' as president and who allegedly threatened 'the destruction of this country from within.' In October 2020, Trump twice called Kamala Harris 'this monster.'
The distinctions drawn by people in power trying to divide a population are often unworkable. How do you tell a law-abiding person from a terrorist gang member? From their tattoos, according to this administration. Neither citizenship nor immigration status is visible on a person's body or audible in their voice, yet people of color of every immigration and citizenship status have long faced racial profiling. Attempts to define visible signs of the monster are not new either; nor is the fact that monster-making sweeps up an immense number of people in its dragnet.
But monsters are never hermetically sealed from the group whose borders they were invented to define. This ham-fisted attempt at an evidence-based reason for trafficking people to El Salvador echoes earlier attempts to identify distinct groups in a population where human variety existed on a continuum. Notorious among these examples was the monstrification and mass slaughter, in Nazi Germany, of Jewish, Roma, Sinti, LGBTQ+, disabled and neurodiverse individuals as well as political dissidents.
In the U.S. today, to tolerate, permit or encourage the monstrification of any non-citizen and consequently deny them due process is to tolerate, permit and encourage this to happen to U.S. citizens.
The category of the human is shrinking as politicians, tech bros and right-wing pundits monstrify everyone who isn't a cis-het white man. Today's dehumanizing language extends beyond the Venezuelan deportees that this administration labeled as 'monsters.' It extends to women, minorities and LGBTQ+ people by questioning their right to bodily autonomy, privacy and dignity. It extends to people who are unhoused, poor, disabled or elderly, as social services are cut.
These narratives hail back to a broader, centuries-long Western tradition of gazing at other people and framing them as monstrous: as beings who supposedly broke the category of 'human' and could be legitimately denied of fundamental rights.
Monster-making campaigns always serve a purpose. For European colonizers, claiming that Indigenous people were less than human disguised European land grabs. Laws defining enslaved Black Africans as chattel property legalized their enslavement and broke the labor solidarity between white servants and enslaved Africans. And the Nazis claimed that Jews and other minorities had caused Germany to lose the First World War and were responsible for the nation's economic collapse.
Again today, the goals of monstrification serve the myth of white supremacy, including the notion that the U.S. was meant to be a white ethnostate. Thus while the Trump administration terminated a program for refugees fleeing Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela, it welcomed white Afrikaners from South Africa by calling them refugees.
Furthermore, by exploiting Jews' proximity to whiteness, this administration is monstrifying Palestinians in order to justify the Israeli government's human rights violations. By declaring that protesters, including those who are Jewish, calling for an end to the Gaza slaughter are antisemitic, and by withholding research funds from and interfering with universities by calling them hotbeds of antisemitism, the administration attempts to convince people that Palestinian civilians do not deserve food, homes, safety or even life — and that recognizing the humanity of Jews requires denying that Palestinians are human and have human rights. Yet the administration's own antisemitism is clear: Trump has pardoned leaders of antisemitic and white supremacist organizations and hosted prominent antisemites as dinner guests.
This multi-pronged campaign of monstrification strengthens the personal loyalty of white supremacists and Christian nationalists towards Trump and sows discord and poisons solidarity among his targets and critics.
Monstrifying narratives have been undermining the possibility of a more inclusive body politic for millennia. But there's an antidote to us-them messages of hate, fear and exclusion that claim that only a tiny minority of people are truly human. That antidote is to realize that by recognizing the humanity of others we don't disavow our own humanity: We demonstrate it. It behooves us to demand that all people receive equal protection under the law, and to call out monstrifying narratives that, in the end, dehumanize us all.
Surekha Davies is a historian, speaker and monster consultant for TV, film and radio. She is the author of 'Humans: A Monstrous History' and writes the newsletter 'Strange and Wondrous: Notes From a Science Historian.'

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