Peter Brimelow writes:
The original draft of my huge 1992 National Review
cover story “Time to Rethink Immigration” contained
a discussion of IQ and immigration policy, alluding to
Richard J. Herrnstein’s and Charles Murray’s book
The Bell Curve,
which I knew was in preparation. The reaction of my dear
friend John O’Sullivan, NR’s Editor in those happy
days, was very instructive. Not only did he insist on
cutting out the discussion, but he also hunted down every
copy of the original draft in NR’s office and had
them destroyed. His argument was that any mention of IQ or
heredity at all would result in the issue monopolizing all
response to my article, plunging the rest of my very broad
case against contemporary immigration policy irretrievably
into the dark. No doubt he was right. But public debate on
both immigration policy and the IQ issue has gone
backwards since 1992, although the issues are more
pressing than ever. VDARE is happy to provide Steve Sailer
with a place to explore them.
America and the
Left Half of the Bell Curve
Part I: IQ and
Why We're Afraid to Talk About It
Part II: How the
Other Half Lives
By Steve Sailer
The last
twenty years of immigration have thus brought
about a redistribution of wealth in America,
from less-skilled workers and toward employers.
[Harvard economist George]
Borjas estimates that one half of the
relative fall in the wages of high school
dropouts since the 1980s can be traced directly
to mass immigration. At some point, this kind of
wealth redistribution, from the less well off to
the affluent, becomes malignant. In the 1950s
and ‘60s, Americans with low reading and math
scores could aspire to and achieve the American
Dream of a middle class lifestyle. That is less
realistic today. Americans today who do poorly
in high school are increasingly condemned to a
low-wage existence; and mass immigration is a
major reason why.
This recent
statement is one of the most unusual made by any
American candidate for public office in many years.
Almost all other politicians and pundits have become far
more comfortable offering policy prescriptions for
Garrison Keillor's Lake Wobegon—"where all the
children are above average." In the real world,
however, half the school kids are always going to be
lower than the median.
Nor has any other
candidate mentioned lately that this mathematical fact
imposes upon the rest of us ethical obligations—not to
use complex laws, like our immigration policies, to
exploit our less acute fellow citizens for our own
benefit.
Who is this
foolhardy politician who talks like an updated version
of Harry Truman? Of course, it's the one candidate with
the unerring instinct for making himself unpopular: Pat
Buchanan. (Click here for Buchanan's
full speech and here for
Peter Brimelow's response.).
Of all the forlorn
causes Buchanan has backed, the welfare of
Not-So-Sharp-Americans might be the most hopeless.
America's growing IQ stratification, and the resulting
class war that the clever are waging upon the clueless,
is one of the great unmentionables. Nobody else in
politics is even thinking about the inevitable conflict
between the left half and the right half of the IQ Bell
Curve. The notion that Americans with double digit IQ's
have a moral right to leaders who defend them never
seems even to occur to their countrymen with triple
digit IQs.
This is the first
of three columns on the moral, economic and political
challenges posed by inequality in intelligence. This
introductory essay will consider why we are never
supposed to write about what we talk about constantly:
how people differ in intelligence. The second column
will quantify the large and growing disadvantage
suffered by the non-bright in the modern economy. The
third column will explain why immigration reform offers
the most slamdunk certain way to make life better for
our fellow citizens on the left side of the Bell Curve;
and why any politician who tries to stand up for the
less clever half of America faces enormous difficulties.
Why is there such
an adamant taboo against hard-headed discussions of IQ?
Richard J. Herrnstein’s and Charles Murray’s book
The Bell Curve was the nonfiction publishing
event of Nineties, with an amazing 400,000 copies of a
statistics and graphs-crammed social science tome sold.
But subsequent books on IQ have experienced endless
difficulties merely becoming physically available to
readers. New York publishers John Wiley first issued
University of Edinburgh psychologist Chris Brand's
lively book The g Factor, then actually
snatched it back off store shelves. (To buy it,
email Dr. Brand at
mailto:brand@crispian.demon.co.uk ). And the
dean of psychometricians, Berkeley's
Arthur Jensen, who has published 400 scientific
articles on intelligence, searched for years for a
publisher for his magnum opus, also named The g
Factor. He finally ended up at a house so obscure
that not until six months after publication was his book
available
even from Amazon.
IQ is off-limits
today because people who are verbally facile, such as
journalists and academics, tend to assume that reality
is largely constructed from words. Thus, if we would all
just stop writing about unpleasant facts, they would
disappear.
Unpleasant Fact
# 1: Five
out of six African-Americans have IQs below the white
average. But not talking about this IQ difference has
singularly failed to make it go away. The black-white
gap has remained roughly one standard deviation for the
last 80 years.
What the censorship
has accomplished, however, is preventing the
emergence of a more a nuanced and optimistic view of
black-white differences. Although IQ is, by far, the
single most effective measurement known to the social
sciences for predicting human outcomes, it's hardly
omniscient. Indeed, African-Americans tend to be better
than whites at certain mental abilities that IQ tests
are bad at gauging, such as the improvisatory creativity
that makes them world-beaters in jazz, basketball, rap,
running with the football, and preaching. (See
"Great Black Hopes", my 1996 article that
introduced this novel perspective. Also check out
"The Half Full glass"
for my more advanced 1998 review of Jensen's The
g Factor.)
Unpleasant Fact
#2: Far
more subtle, although the Great and the Good ceaselessly
sermonize us that racial conflicts are caused by the
majority feeling superior to the minority, a quick
global survey suggests the opposite. The doltish masses
have frequently risen up against astute
"middle-man minorities" that control trade.
Southeast Asians
have repeatedly launched murderous pogroms against the
Overseas Chinese who
dominate their economies, such as in Indonesia in
1998. African-Americans burned down hundreds of
Korean stores in South Central L.A. in 1992.
Fijians,
Ugandans, and
Trinidadians have all tried to oppress the
more clever Asian Indians in their midst. The Turks
killed huge numbers of Armenians in 1915. And from 1933
to 1945 the Germans eliminated most European Jews, at a
time when German Jews were the best-educated ethnic
group in the world. (The Nazis banned IQ tests
specifically because Jews outperformed gentile Germans.)
Thus the truly
unmentionable Unpleasant Fact today is not that blacks
have mean IQs well below the white average. It’s that
other groups have mean IQs well above it.
This censorship may
be prudent. But it is crippling American intellectual
discourse.
Unpleasant Fact
#3: Honest
talk about IQ would expose some deeply personal
inconsistencies among our most influential thinkers.
Although the typical white intellectual claims he wants
to censor discussion of IQ to shield black self-esteem,
his sometimes-berserk reactions reveal that he finds it
a peril to his own. The typical white intellectual
considers himself superior to ordinary white people for
two contradictory reasons: a] he constantly proclaims
belief in human equality, but they don't; b] he has a
high IQ, but they don't.
Unpleasant Fact
#4:
Stifling discourse on intelligence differences allows
the IQ upper class to quietly push its interests at the
expense of the rest of society. Denouncing Arthur Jensen
and Charles Murray proclaims your faith in empirical
egalitarianism. Then you can ignore the irksome demands
of moral egalitarianism.
Consider – the
inordinate complexity of the tax system, law, government
regulation. This allows a high IQ priesthood of lawyers,
accountants and consultants to extract handsome sums
from the average citizen in return for interpreting
these inscrutable instructions.
the nonstop
propagandizing that anyone who doesn't attend college is
doomed. Yet there is very little evidence that college
education adds much to earning power—other than by using
the SAT to sort high school seniors into IQ strata for
the convenience of corporations banned by civil rights
law from giving IQ-type tests themselves.
the IQ overclass's
promotion of do-it-yourself sexual morality. For a
prudent, coolly logical individual, the wisdom of the
ages can be rather redundant. But for people whose
passions outrun their foresight, it was a godsend. Thus,
in the 1960s when American intellectuals imported
Swedish sexual morals, along with Swedish-style welfare
for unmarried mothers, it had few ill effects in
Minnesota (traditionally the highest IQ state). But it
proved an instant disaster for African-Americans.
Above all,
immigration. According to two separate methodologies
employed by Herrnstein and Murray, the average IQ of
recent immigrants and their children is somewhere around
a mediocre 95. This is high enough to drive huge numbers
of African-Americans (average IQ: 85) out of the
legitimate workforce. And high enough to drive down the
wages of white blue-collar workers. But not high enough
to create competition for the jobs of media people and
others with high Verbal SAT scores.
Our political
discourse is dominated not by a concern for the needs of
the American people as a whole, but by the self-interest
and unexamined assumptions of the verbally facile.
Down with the
Tyranny of the Glib!
[Steve Sailer [email
him] is founder of the Human Biodiversity Institute and
movie critic for
The American Conservative.
His website
www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily
blog.]
July 15, 2000