Buckley Capitulates
Some More [Peter
Brimelow] - 04/15/05
Bill Buckley will be 80 this
November 24, which gives me some time to finish the
celebratory essay I’ve been writing in my head since he
stabbed the immigration reform movement in the back
in 1997 by firing National Review editor John
O’Sullivan without warning and allowing the immigration
issue (and me!) to be purged from the magazine. More
recently, there have been
signs that NR has been triangulating back
toward immigration reform (lite),
after a pause presumably to get word from NeoCon Central
after 9/11. The limits to this welcome development are
clearly displayed by Buckley’s recent column
“Can We Stop Illegals?” in which he insultingly
compares the idea of a fence on the southern border to
the building of the Berlin Wall and proclaims: no.
Needless to say, Buckley remains oblivious to such
subtleties such as encouraging self-deportation by
altering the
incentives keeping illegals here. Scott Fitzgerald
famously said there are
no second acts in American lives. There has been in
Bill Buckley’s—but it’s a farce.
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