Chabria: Amid national sorrow, Trump stops pretending it's about the 'worst of the worst'

Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe and Spec. Sarah Beckstrom of the West Virginia National Guard.

Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe and Army Spec. Sarah Beckstrom of the West Virginia National Guard. Beckstrom was killed and Wolfe wounded by a gunman in Washington, D.C.

(Associated Press)

Anita Chabria. (Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times)

By 

Anita Chabria

Columnist

Follow

Dec. 2, 2025

3 AM PT

Share via

Close extra sharing options

Email Facebook X LinkedIn Threads Reddit WhatsApp

Copy Link URL

Copied!

Print

Trump is using National Guard member Sarah Beckstrom’s killing to justify sweeping anti-immigrant policies rooted in white nationalist ideology.

Mass deportation plans and voter suppression tactics threaten democracy and marginalized communities nationwide.

The killing of Sarah Beckstrom, a 20-year-old serving her country in the National Guard to help pay for college, is horrific.

Her fellow soldier, Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, 24, remains in a fight for his life.

Their alleged attacker, Afghan national Rahmanullah Lakanwal, 29, is in custody and will likely face the federal death penalty.

It’s important that we stop for a moment and recognize the unacceptable terror of two people serving our country being gunned down in an apparently targeted attack just blocks from the White House a day before Thanksgiving. It’s also important we examine Lakanwal’s path to the United States to understand whether any red flags were missed.

Advertisement

But it’s equally important to stop pretending that Trump’s increasingly overt racism passes for sound immigration policy.

As infuriating and saddening as this crime is, it is not a remark on all immigrants. Yet, here he goes again.

We don’t want those people,” he said Sunday night, speaking of refugees from Third World countries.

Advertisement

President Donald Trump speaks to reporters after speaking to troops via video from his Mar-a-Lago estate on Thanksgiving, Thursday, Nov. 27, 2025, in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

World & Nation

Trump pushes for more restrictions on Afghan refugees. Experts say many are already in place

The Trump administration is promising a stricter anti-immigration agenda after an Afghan national was charged in the shooting of two National Guard members.

Nov. 29, 2025

That was around the same time the official White House account posted a video of Trump reciting the civil rights song “The Snake” by Oscar Brown Jr.

“ ‘Oh shut up, silly woman,’ said that reptile with a grin,” Trump intoned over footage of immigration agents rounding up, you guessed it, brown people. “You knew damn well I was a snake before you brought me in.”

I mean, the Klan would blush at some of this stuff.

While we’ve seen it before, this time Trump’s attack on non-white immigrants seems like a move not to placate his MAGA voters but to marginalize them — an embrace of an increasingly powerful farther-right-than-MAGA contingent of his base that is open in its disdain for pluralism and equality.

Advertisement

Shortly after the tragedy in Washington, Trump vowed on social media to “remove anyone who is not a net asset to the United States, or is incapable of loving our Country.”

Please note that he completely dropped any charade of this being about violent criminals or even those who crossed the border illegally — the people MAGA (and many others) thought would be targeted in an immigration crackdown.

Instead, he seems to be cultivating support from younger, angrier Republican men who eschew traditional conservatism as weak and misguided. Sadly, there are a growing number of these small-tent conservatives who are open in their belief that America should be a white Christian nation governed by men.

Advertisement

The America First folks, led by Nick Fuentes, are the most high-profile of these types outside of the administration, but there are other groups, some affiliated and some openly hostile of one another, that are amassing power both within the Republican base and in its power structure. On the inside, one need look no further than the ranting of Stephen Miller for proof that racism is increasingly official Trump policy, stretching far beyond closing our borders or removing undocumented people.

Sound alarmist? Let’s let Trump finish.

He promised in a social media post a few days ago to “denaturalize migrants who undermine domestic tranquility, and deport any Foreign National who is a public charge, security risk, or non-compatible with Western Civilization. These goals will be pursued with the aim of achieving a major reduction in illegal and disruptive populations ... Only REVERSE MIGRATION can fully cure this situation.”

Disruptive populations. Like U.S. citizens of Mexican origin? Indian Americans? Or maybe protesters? Or voters?

Before you hit the keyboard to tell me it’s just another Trump rant with no teeth, check out the official account of the Labor Department, which recently posted a picture of the Lincoln Memorial with the text (in a font associated with the Third Reich) that reads, “(t)he fight for Western Civilization has begun — and Americanism will Prevail.”

Or look at the Department of Homeland Security, which recently posted “Remigration now,” and has for months also been claiming we are in a battle for “Western civilization.”

Advertisement

That particular term, remigration, is used by far-right believers of the Great Replacement Theory for the idea that white-majority counties can only survive if they — peacefully or violently — remove non-white people.

“Give me your tired, your hungry, your blonde,” if you will. Keep your “shithole” residents.

Migrants walk by the jungle near Bajo Chiquito village, the first border control of the Darien Province in Panama, on September 22, 2023. The clandestine journey through the Darien Gap usually lasts five or six days, at the mercy of all kinds of bad weather. More than 390,000 migrants have entered Panama through this jungle so far this year, far more than in all of 2022, when there were 248,000, according to official Panamanian data. (Photo by Luis ACOSTA / AFP) (Photo by LUIS ACOSTA/AFP via Getty Images)

Voices

Chabria: Trump is exploiting Ruby Garcia’s death to depict immigrants as ‘animals’

In politicizing the death of Ruby Garcia, the Republican former president is stoking fear for votes — and ignoring the many women killed in a crisis of violent men.

April 11, 2024

In the lull of the holidays, with other issues on our minds, like how to pay for Christmas, many have felt a lessening of tension around this rogue administration. The Democrats seem to be gaining traction for the upcoming midterms, offering the hope of a Congress that isn’t supine.

Advertisement

The media have started referring to Trump as a “lame duck” on his way out, ignoring to the point of journalistic malpractice his groundwork to undermine or even rig the next election — whether the GOP candidate is a third-term Trump or a not-so-great-replacement like Vice President JD Vance.

But this is a moment of consequence, when the mask is off.

Funding is kicking in to supercharge the deportation machine to new levels. Literally billions of dollars will be devoted to rounding up and removing those here without proper papers, including people who have lived here for decades and done nothing but work hard and raise families.

That has left American immigrants, citizens or not, afraid. Our schools have lost students, our businesses are missing customers. We have pushed even legal immigrants into an underground, uncertain who or what is safe.

Advertisement

At the same time, the midterms are less than a year away, and the election deniers Trump has installed in key posts are already working to create systems that will likely make it harder for poor and marginalized Americans to vote. That involves curtailing mail-in ballots (leaving some to decide whether to take time off of work to vote) or imposing identification rules that could disenfranchise married women, foster kids, naturalized citizens and more.

This should be a moment for the nation to pay tribute to Beckstrom and pray for Wolfe. Profiles of Beckstrom describe her as a caring, public-spirited young woman who wanted to make a difference and serve her country. She never got the chance.

But it’s also a moment to be honest about what is happening. We have a president who is saying all brown and Black immigrants are a problem, even some who have earned citizenship.

It was never about the “worst of the worst,” but it is about being able to tell the difference between the snake and its victim.

More to Read

President Donald Trump speaks to reporters after speaking to troops via video from his Mar-a-Lago estate on Thanksgiving, Thursday, Nov. 27, 2025, in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Voices

Arellano: Trump’s message to ‘nice’ Americans: You’re all illegal now President Donald Trump speaks to reporters after speaking to troops via video from his Mar-a-Lago estate on Thanksgiving, Thursday, Nov. 27, 2025, in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) Trump wants to ‘permanently pause’ migration from poor countries; all asylum reviews suspended

Nov. 28, 2025

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 23: U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a multilateral meeting with leaders from several Arab and Muslim-majority countries at the 80th session of the UN’s General Assembly (UNGA) at the United Nations headquarters on September 23, 2025 in New York City. The leaders discussed plans for post-war governance in Gaza. World leaders convened for the 80th Session of UNGA, with this year’s theme for the annual global meeting being “Better together: 80 years and more for peace, development and human rights.” (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) Trump ran on ‘America first.’ Now he views presidency as a ‘worldwide situation’

Nov. 15, 2025

Insights

L.A. Times Insights delivers AI-generated analysis on Voices content to offer all points of view. Insights does not appear on any news articles.

Viewpoint

This article generally aligns with a

Center Left

point of view.

Learn more about this AI-generated analysis

Perspectives

The following AI-generated content is powered by Perplexity. The Los Angeles Times editorial staff does not create or edit the content.

Ideas expressed in the piece

Sarah Beckstrom’s death at age 20 represents a tragic loss of a young person serving her country, and Andrew Wolfe’s critical condition demands prayers and support from the nation

[1][2]

While examining whether red flags were missed in the attacker’s vetting process is appropriate and necessary, Trump’s response represents an increasingly overt pattern of racism targeting all non-white immigrants rather than dangerous criminals

[1]

The administration has abandoned any pretense that immigration enforcement targets violent offenders or those who crossed borders illegally, instead promoting policies to remove anyone deemed “not a net asset to the United States”

Federal agencies are actively implementing policies employing terminology and framing directly associated with white supremacist ideology, including “remigration” and references to “Western Civilization” connected to Great Replacement Theory

Immigration enforcement has become a tool for marginalizing brown and Black immigrants regardless of legal status, creating measurable harm as immigrant communities live in fear, schools lose students, and even legal immigrants are pushed underground

The administration’s agenda extends beyond immigration policy to encompassing voter suppression measures targeting marginalized Americans ahead of the midterms through mail-in ballot restrictions and identification requirements

This represents a fundamental threat to democratic institutions, pluralism, and the nation’s founding principles of equality

Different views on the topic

Reexamining the entry and asylum approval of Afghan immigrants admitted under the Biden administration represents a necessary and appropriate security response following the attack

[2]

The vetting process warrants investigation given the suspect was supposed to be vetted against classified and unclassified holdings upon entry and during asylum proceedings

[2]

The suspect’s background working with U.S. and British special forces in Afghanistan before allegedly targeting American troops raises legitimate counterterrorism concerns requiring investigation

[1][2]

The focus should be on strengthening terrorism threat assessment and identifying potential radicalization that may occur after individuals enter the country rather than attributing policy responses to discriminatory intent

Immigration enforcement can appropriately incorporate security considerations and threat assessment without necessarily constituting racial discrimination

Source