It turns out that the reason for Buchanan’s silence was
that he had been writing
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and Conquest of America
and
unlike a lot of journalists, he wanted the book to be
made out of fresh material rather than a meshing
together of old op-eds. This book has not only answered
my final concern, it single-handedly reframed the debate
over immigration and addressed all of them. Despite
that, or maybe because of it, the political
Establishment, liberal and "conservative", has
been notably reluctant to discuss it.
Buchanan’s book
immediately rose to the top of the Amazon.com’s
bestseller list and got to #3 on the NY Times
list and remained in the top 10 for weeks. Some 175,000
copies are in print. Unlike the
virulent denunciations of Buchanan’s
last book on immigration,
Death of the West, virtually all conservatives
who have discussed it, aside from a few loony
libertarians, have rallied behind its thesis—or at the
very least have admitted that it needs to be taken
seriously. The book has received praise from many other
top conservatives like
Jim Pinkerton,
Paul Craig Roberts,
Cal Thomas, and
Bill Lind.
Even most of the liberals who commented on the book were
respectful. The Washington Post ran an article
on the book entitled
"Anti-Immigration Movement Finds an Articulate Voice"
which acknowledged "One has to give Buchanan
credit. He is a muscular writer, fully in command of the
English language he feels is under siege. He is adept at
linking history, statistics and the writings of
philosophers and economists to proffer forceful
arguments." The article concluded by warning fellow
liberals "We would dismiss him and the anger embodied
in "State of Emergency" at our peril." When
Pat was on the HBO TV show
"Real Time" the usually
smug and sarcastic host Bill Maher admitted that
many facts in the book shocked him, and concluded that
"you got a lot of applause in our liberal audience".
This is not to say the
Establishment is thrilled with the book. The New
York Times editorialized (
October
11,2006):
"The doomsayer's torch
has lately been grabbed by cultural sentinels like Pat
Buchanan, whose new book warns the United States is
being reconquered by disease-carrying Latinos. Unless
Americans of white European descent can Ziploc the
borders and start
churning out babies, he says, their age of
civilizing domination is done for."
[See Pat's answer
here.]
And, overall, the Mainstream Media has just tried to ignore State of
Emergency. For such a timely and popular book, it
has been very scantly reviewed. The Los Angeles Times,
[send them
mail] The New Republic, and The
Nation have not reviewed it. Even the New York
Times,
[Email
their ombudsman.] which found the book
worthy of an editorial denunciation, has yet to give
more than a passing 50 words of review.
Given that this is one of the most popular conservative books of the
year, one would think that at least the conservative
press would review it. But that is not the case. The
Wall Street Journal,
[send their Editorial Page
mail]
National Review,
[send them
mail]
The Weekly Standard, and
American Spectator have yet to review it.
I called to ask. The
Weekly Standard says they have sent it out to be
reviewed and have just not received it yet. (Oh yeah?)
The
American Spectator declined to comment on why
they have not reviewed it.
When I talked to Michael Potemra, [send him
mail] book review editor at National
Review, he claimed that there are just so many books
and so little space. (How may of them are
conservative best-sellers?). Then he asked who the
piece was for. When I said VDARE.COM, he told me he
couldn’t help me anymore and promptly
hung up.
Buchanan acknowledges that he
gets a great deal of his arguments and facts from
VDARE writers like
Steve Sailer,
Joe Guzzardi, Alan Wall, Peter Brimelow,
James Fulford, and the late Sam Francis. And, in
what could be the highest unintentional praise of the
book, the Southern Poverty Law Center
complained that "through
his
old friend Buchanan,
[Sam] Francis continues
to be heard from beyond the grave."
While I was thrilled to see the success of this book, I
did not expect it to have a great effect on me. I spend
9 hours a day reading and writing about immigration for
a living. To be immodest, I know more about the issue
than your average reader. I expected that Buchanan would
say what I already knew in much better prose. But Pat
graciously gave me
an audio CD version of the book
,
and I
listened to it on a drive from Washington, DC to
Columbia, SC. The facts that he laid out in the book,
made me so impassioned, upset, and often angry, that on
more than one occasion, I literally had to pull over to
a rest stop to compose myself for fear that I would get
in a road rage incident.
While a good deal of the information and arguments were
not new to me, there were still a great number of facts
that I had not heard before, and gave me a great sense
of urgency.
So what makes State of Emergency so effective?
Buchanan’s book seamlessly blends together a number of
basic points that are probably self evident to most
ordinary readers. By asking obvious questions that no one else
has the courage or brains to ask, it makes you
completely reevaluate every aspect of our immigration
policy. Some people may think "he
can't say that," but with such strong
statistical and anecdotal evidence, it’s difficult to
say he’s wrong.
Buchanan dramatically lays out the problems that mass
immigration is causing. He discusses how it will
destroy the GOP, the
English language, the gangs, the disease, the
schools, health care,
crime. But while all this is moving, true, and well
laid out, it is hardly new ground that has been
laid out in books like
Invasion
,
Mexifornia
,
and
In Mortal Danger
.
Even a lot of open borders advocates will say, "I
agree with you that there is a problem, but…" and
that is where Buchanan goes beyond these other books. He
demolishes virtually every single myth that the open
borders lobby is based on before they can object.
America is a
nation of immigrants.
America is a
"creedal nation" based on ideas. Race
doesn’t matter. Immigrants
do the jobs Americans
don’t. We
can’t deport 12 million people. These assertions
have been repeated ad nauseum by the
establishment so many times, that even many opponents of
illegal immigration seem to concede them.
In refuting the shibboleths of multicultural left and
right, Buchanan goes into controversial areas where few
mainstream writers dare to tread. He defends Sam
Francis’ claim that Western Civilization could only be
made by Europeans, and seems to accept the great taboo
truth that there are immutable
genetic differences between the races that must
be taken into consideration. He argues that the
1924 Immigration Act, and Dwight Eisenhower’s
Operation Wetback were successes. He praises universally
denounced men like the French author
Jean Raspail and the British statesman
Enoch Powell as prophets.
This does not make
Pat Buchanan a white nationalist, as many of his
critics (and perhaps some of his supporters) will claim.
He speaks with compassion about the negative effect that
immigration has on African Americans. He does not see
America as just a white nation, but approves of the
French writer Hector St. John De Crevecoeur’s
assessment that "[In America,] individuals of all
nations are
melted into a new race of men." Neither
Buchanan, nor Crevecoeur meant this in universalistic
terms of a
"new Soviet man" or "new global democratic
man," but rather as a people who have a unique and
distinctive culture rooted in, but distinct from Europe
and more specifically Great Britain. As Buchanan
puts it bluntly: "Language, faith, culture, and
history--and, yes, birth, blood, and soil--produce a
people, not an ideology."
Thus Buchanan writes that all immigrants of all races
can and should assimilate—but he knows that this
requires more than speaking English and voting
Republican (two things, he points out, that are not
happening). Instead, he argues that to assimilate,
immigrants must adopt
"our language, customs, and habits, as well as our
principles." Furthermore, he asserts the
obvious and unmentionable fact that.
it is not true that
all creeds and cultures are equally assimilable in a
First World nation born of England,
Christianity, and
Western Civilization. Race, faith, ethnicity, and
history leave genetic fingerprints that no "proposition
nation" can erase."
While Jean Raspail has said of France’s colonization by
the Third World,
"The deed is done," Buchanan is not quite as
pessimistic. Buchanan argues that we have one "last
chance" to save our country and civilization, before
the
rising political clout of Latinos will make any
positive legislative changes impossible.
With such a bleak picture, what is Buchanan’s solution?
His policy prescriptions are simple: reject amnesty,
have a moratorium on legal immigration,
build a fence, end
birthright and
dual citizenship, and enforce our laws against
illegal immigration. These are not radical and new
policies, but common sense that virtually everybody
outside the political elite agrees on. Everyone knows
what must be done to stop the invasion. But the question
Buchanan concludes by asking is: do our political
leaders have the will to do anything about it?
Buchanan does not answer that question or give any
concrete suggestions on how patriotic Americans can take
back their country. At the age of 68, and after three
failed presidential runs and countless smears by the
political Establishment—again, liberal and
"conservative"—he presumably is not the one to lead
a movement. Nonetheless, this book will awaken thousands
of Americans to the threat of mass immigration, and
inspire them to take action. When the history of the
coming immigration cut-off is written, State of
Emergency will be seen as a milestone.
Marcus Epstein
[send
him mail] is the founder
of the Robert A Taft
Club and the executive director of the
The American
Cause and
Team America PAC. A selection of his articles can be seen
here.